Executive Control and Emotion Regulation in Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults
A special issue of International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (ISSN 1660-4601). This special issue belongs to the section "Mental Health".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (1 September 2022) | Viewed by 8796
Special Issue Editors
Interests: cognitive development; bilingualism; executive control; bullying and victimization
Interests: language development; bilingual acquisition; phonological acquisition; developmental language disorder; language assessment; bullying
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The present Special Issue aims to publish studies on executive control (EC), emotion regulation (ER), and their associations. The literature on EC defines it as a class of controlled cognitive processes that allows for the accomplishment of current task goals, including focusing attention on task-relevant information and inhibiting irrelevant information. Researchers have proposed that processes of EC can support ER and vice-versa. A maladaptive pattern of ER, or a dysfunctional capacity for EC, which involves a failure to regulate or interfere with adaptive functioning, can cause serious problems that hamper well-being and everyday functioning. In this way, youngsters with an adequate ER are better able to maintain greater social commitment, to solve problems efficiently, and to communicate more effectively, which enables satisfactory social relationships and proper socio-emotional development. Thus, a balanced relationship between EC and ER can affect a wide array of children’s and adolescent’s lives and is crucial for adequate psychological, emotional, cognitive, and social adjustment.
This Special Issue aims to bring together studies that explore EC, ER, and their mutual connections, and other potential variables that illustrate this association with children’s, adolescents’ and young adults’ well-being, such as conduct problems or even peer victimization.
This Special Issue is open to any research addressing a health perspective from a psychological and/or educational point of view that includes theoretical and empirical studies on executive control abilities and emotion regulation.
Dr. Daniel Adrover-Roig
Dr. Eva Aguilar Mediavilla
Dr. Raúl López Penadés
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Executive control
- Emotion regulation
- Emotional intelligence
- Early life (risk) factors
- Mental health
- Children, adolescents, and young adults
- Family factors
- Environment
- Behavioral problems
- Cognitive development
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