“…First, studies using the pilot version of this measure with adult faces have demonstrated expected associations with other measures of emotion recognition and knowledge (Castro, Halberstadt, & Garrett-Peters, 2016), the typical gender difference of girls performing more accurately than boys (Rehder et al, 2017), higher scores for second-grade children thought to be typically developing compared to children with conduct problems and callous/unemotional behaviors (Rehder et al, 2017), and longitudinal effects of hyperactivity on emotion recognition (Castro, Cooke, et al, 2018). Second, teachers who report valuing children’s anger in educational settings also demonstrated anger accuracy on the PerCEIVED task (Hagan et al, 2020). Third, with regard to emotion bias, studies have focused on anger and the degree to which misperception of anger is differentially imposed on Black compared to White faces; this phenomenon has now been verified in the similar measure with adult faces (Halberstadt et al, 2018), as well as the PerCEIVED task with child faces and in several studies with various populations (Cooke, 2020; Halberstadt et al, 2020).…”