This study is the first to provide direct observations of dyadic interactions with friends for
preschool-aged disruptive children. Forty preschoolers (mean age 52 months) rated by
parents as “hard to manage” on Goodman's (1997) Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire
(SDQ), as well as 40 control children (matched for age, gender, school, and ethnic
background) were filmed for 20 minutes on two occasions playing with a teacher-nominated
best friend. The videos were transcribed and coded for antisocial behaviour, displays of
negative emotion, and empathic/prosocial responses to friend's distress. Individual
differences in social behaviour were considered in relation to false-belief performance,
affective perspective taking, and executive function skills (planning and inhibitory control).
Compared with controls, the hard-to-manage group showed significantly higher rates of
both antisocial behaviour and displays of negative emotion, as well as significantly lower
rates of emphatic/prosocial responses. Across both groups combined, frequencies of angry
and antisocial behaviours were related to poor executive control. Mental-state understanding
was not significantly correlated with antisocial behaviour, emotion display, or empathy,
suggesting that the interpersonal problems of young disruptive children owe more to failure
of behavioural regulation than to problems in social understanding per se. However, given
the relatively low power of the study, these findings require replication with a larger sample.