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Supporting emotion regulation and recognising dysregulation in children and young people: what do we need to know?
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Dr. Alessio Bellato
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It refers to the ability to monitor, assess, and modify emotional responses in order to achieve personal goals or adapt to situations.
What does emotional dysregulation typically look like in children?
Intense emotional reactions, low frustration tolerance, rapid mood changes, and difficulty calming down.
What brain area is especially involved in developing intrinsic emotion regulation strategies?
The Affective Reactivity Index (ARI) is a brief, validated questionnaire designed to measure irritability levels in children and adolescents.
Which tool is often used to assess emotional dysregulation in children via parent report?
What is emotional regulation?
The prefrontal cortex, particularly the dorsolateral and ventromedial regions.
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Dr. Alessio Bellato
"I am a Lecturer in Child and Adolescent Mental Health at the University of Southampton, UK, and a psychologist specialising in child psychiatry and psychology. I serve as Joint Editor of the Journal of Child Psychiatry and Psychology Advances, and I co-lead the South East Asia Mental Health Consortium at the University of Nottingham Malaysia. My research focuses on the clinical utility of objective markers of emotion regulation and dysregulation to identify children and young people facing mental health and emotional challenges, and to monitor treatment outcomes."
Alessio Bellato
Sophie Mizrahi
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Explore the topic
Talk summary
From research to real life – Sign up today!
Supporting emotion regulation and recognising dysregulation in children and young people: what do we need to know?
Flashcards!
Share your feedback!
Dr. Alessio Bellato
About the speaker!
Test your knowledge!
Back
How much do you know about emotion regulation and dysregulation?
Start quiz
Question 1/6
Question 2/6
Question 3/6
Question 4/6
Question 5/6
Question 6/6
Well done!
Click here to return to home page. Sign up for your free account here
Start quiz
It refers to the ability to monitor, assess, and modify emotional responses in order to achieve personal goals or adapt to situations.
What does emotional dysregulation typically look like in children?
Intense emotional reactions, low frustration tolerance, rapid mood changes, and difficulty calming down.
What brain area is especially involved in developing intrinsic emotion regulation strategies?
The Affective Reactivity Index (ARI) is a brief, validated questionnaire designed to measure irritability levels in children and adolescents.
Which tool is often used to assess emotional dysregulation in children via parent report?
What is emotional regulation?
The prefrontal cortex, particularly the dorsolateral and ventromedial regions.
Click here to return to home page:
Dr. Alessio Bellato
"I am a Lecturer in Child and Adolescent Mental Health at the University of Southampton, UK, and a psychologist specialising in child psychiatry and psychology. I serve as Joint Editor of the Journal of Child Psychiatry and Psychology Advances, and I co-lead the South East Asia Mental Health Consortium at the University of Nottingham Malaysia. My research focuses on the clinical utility of objective markers of emotion regulation and dysregulation to identify children and young people facing mental health and emotional challenges, and to monitor treatment outcomes."