“…Children that are more successful at understanding emotional cues are more likely to develop appropriate social skills and prosocial responses to peers and to form positive interpersonal relationships that foster adaptation to social situations (de Rosnay, Harris, & Pons, 2008;Harris, 2006). For example, preschoolers' ability to recognize and understand others' emotions has been linked to their social competence (Trentacosta & Fine, 2010); peer acceptance, popularity and leadership (Harris, 2008); diminished aggressive behaviors (Denham et al, 2002); fewer externalizing and internalizing problems (Trentacosta & Fine, 2010); school readiness and early academic competences (Denham et al, 2012;Garner & Waajid, 2008;Leerkes, Paradise, O'Brien, Calkins, & Lange, 2008). Even though children's understanding of emotion improves with age, early individual differences in the overall level of such understanding persist across development (Pons & Harris, 2005).…”