View clinical trials related to Emotional Regulation.
Filter by:This study aims to investigate how GOS food supplement influences the gut-microbiome-brain axis to improve emotion regulation skills and cognition in a sample of children and adolescents (aged 6-14 years).
This activity will have the objective of testing the validity of the integrated in-game assessment and personalized REThinkEMOTIONS platform in the prevention of emotional disorders in youth.
Emotional dysregulation is considered a phenotypic finding that has a purported impact on older adults' peace of mind. In this venue, employing constructive emotional management intervention is one of the breakthroughs that has been empirically targeted to restore positive emotional states and strengthen mental clarity in the geriatric population. Aim: to determine the effect of constructive emotional management interventions on emotional regulation difficulties and peace of mind among older adults. Design: The present study adopted a quasi-experimental methodological approach.
Mightier is a digital mental health tool that uses video game-based heart rate biofeedback to teach emotion regulation. The primary goal of this study is to replicate results from original clinical trials, demonstrating that playing Mightier at home improves common symptoms associated with emotional dysregulation. Participants will be caregivers of children who are using Mightier, a video-game based heart rate biofeedback intervention. Caregivers will be asked to complete a short survey about their child's emotions and behaviors prior to their child's first play and then complete that survey two more times, at 8 weeks and 12 weeks post baseline. The pre-post self report design will allow us to observe changes during Mightier use and relate those changes to overall engagement with the intervention
This phase will complete the TRAC adaptation to a web app. The pilot study (R21 HD089979) effectively translated the ER content of TRAC and the same procedures will be used to translate the remaining content.
This is a single-centre, single-blind, two-arms, controlled study to assess the efficacy and safety of food for special dietary use enriched with 5-hydroxytryptophan, L-theanine and Gamma-aminobutyric acid in generally healthy subjects with no cognitive disturbances
This treatment development study is aimed at developing and pilot testing a 20-week remotely delivered group intervention that integrates two evidence-based treatments: 1) Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) Skills - targeting parental emotion dysregulation and substance use, and 2) Parent Training (PT) - targeting parenting behaviors linked to children's mental health. The case study will provide preliminary data on the feasibility of the DBT Skills +PT intervention and its engagement of the targeted outcomes, and aims to complete foundational steps necessary to conducting a future, larger scale randomized controlled trial. Specific aims are to: 1. Determine feasibility, acceptability and implementation. 2. Evaluate pre-post and weekly changes in measures of parental emotion regulation, parenting stress, parenting quality and children's mental health.
A randomized controlled trial comparing a group in which only child participants play Mightier video games for 8 weeks (Child Play group) to a group in which child and parent participants play Mightier video games for 8 weeks (Child and Parent Play group).
In the United States, people of color (POC) are disproportionally affected by stressors related to race/ethnicity compared with their non-Latinx White (NLW). Considering POC exposed to race-related stress are at high risk of developing a mental health disorder, there is a clear need for treatments that allow individuals to cope effectively with these stressors. Among many evidence-based treatments available, mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs) may be particularly well suited to help POC cope. MBIs are hypothesized to be effective via increases in mindfulness and self-compassion, as well as reductions in experiential avoidance, rumination, and emotion suppression. Despite their effectiveness, MBIs rarely reach POC. As such, innovative strategies such as self-directed app-based intervention may reduce the treatment gap. Considering the lack of research examining the effectiveness of MBIs among POC, especially those who experience elevated levels of race-related stress, this study will employ a randomized control trial (RCT) approach to examine whether receiving an app-based MBI engages the hypothesized mechanisms of change (i.e., mindfulness, self-compassion, experiential avoidance, rumination, emotion suppression) among POC. Similarly, the study will test whether the intervention leads to decreases in the negative mental health outcomes more often associated with exposure to race-related stress (i.e., stress, anxiety, depression). Acceptability, adherence, and satisfaction also will be analyzed to explore whether a non-culturally adapted MBI is still relevant for POC who face race-related stress. Results from this trial will contribute to the nascent data on MBI acceptability and effectiveness with POC. To the investigators' knowledge, this study will also be the first to include a sample of POC recruited based on elevated levels of race-related stress, a high-risk population that is not commonly targeted in MBI research.
The purpose of this study is to assess the impact of therapy dogs on children's anxiety and emotional management during a visit to the pediatric emergency department.