Emotion Processing and Regulation in People with Intellectual Disability

Publication date: Mar 18, 2025

BACKGROUND Intellectual disability (ID) is neurodevelopmental disorder with social impairments, in areas such as interpersonal communication skills and emotion regulation. This overlaps with disabilities associated with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Differences in emotion processing, specifically emotion recognition, reappraisal, and reinforcement learning, has not been compared between patients with ID and ASD. Despite difficulties in emotion regulation among patients with ID, there is a lack of adapted psychotherapy for this patient group. AIMS * To examine differences in emotion processing in individuals with intellectual disability (ID) compared to individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and typically developed individuals. * To evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of an adapted psychotherapeutic intervention to improve emotion regulation in individuals with ID. Data and method The first research question is addressed through a cross-sectional study involving 160 participants: 40 individuals with ID, 40 individuals with ASD, and 80 typically developed controls. Participants will undergo psychological experiments where the investigator simultaneously measure eye movement and pupil dilation using an eye-tracker. To investigate different aspects of social cognition, the investigator will use three psychological experiments: emotion recognition, emotion reappraisal, and reinforced learning in a social context. Differences in social cognition are subsequently used in predictive models to predict the group affiliation of study participants. To evaluate the effectiveness and feasibility of an adapted emotion regulation treatment, the 40 study participants with ID will undergo a manual-based psychotherapy. The treatment, adapted from skills training in dialectical behavior therapy, consists of 12 individual sessions over 12 weeks. The treatment includes four main modules: mindfulness skills, relationships, emotion regulation, and emotional resilience. Outcome measures are administered at baseline, post-treatment, and at a 6-month follow-up. SOCIETAL RELENVANCE This research addresses a significant knowledge gap in social cognition and mental health in individuals with ID. The results may lead to a better understanding of differences in social cognition compared to individuals with ASD, and effective, targeted interventions for emotion regulation in individuals with ID. In the long run, the treatment could help reduce off-label prescription of antipsychotics to manage behavioral deviations in individuals with ID, as challenging behaviors often stem from difficulties with emotion regulation. PROJECT REALISATION The research group consists of an interdisciplinary composition of experts in neuropsychology, experimental psychology, and implementation of psychotherapeutic research. The project has obtained ethical approval and follows the principles of open science, with pre-registration of study protocols.

Concepts Keywords
Autism Emotion regulation
Global Psychological experiment
Psychotherapeutic Psychotherapy
Relatives
Swedish

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH affective disorder
disease MESH psychosis
disease MESH deafness
disease MESH blindness
drug DRUGBANK Tropicamide
disease MESH autism spectrum disorder
disease MESH neurodevelopmental disorder
disease MESH Intellectual Disability
disease MESH neurologic disorders
disease MESH epilepsy
disease MESH dementia
disease MESH Parkinson’s disease
disease MESH substance

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