The Relationship Between School-Age Children’s Self-Reported Perceptions of Their Interoceptive Awareness and Emotional Regulation: An Exploratory Study

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Abstract

Interoceptive awareness (IA) refers to one’s ability to perceive and recognize internal bodily signals. Our behavioral and emotional responses to interoceptive signals are determined by self-regulation. Therefore, IA and self-regulation have considerable impacts on children’s daily occupational engagement and performance. Nonetheless, the relationship between IA and self-regulation relevant to pediatric occupational therapy practice continues to lack empirical evidence. This study explores the association between school-age children’s self-reported IA, emotional regulation, and academic self-regulation. Twenty-five children completed the Cognitive Emotion Regulation Questionnaire for children (CERQ-k), the Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness–Youth adapted version (MAIA-y), and the Academic Self-Regulation Scale; parents/caregivers completed a demographics questionnaire (n = 25). Data were analyzed using Spearman’s rho (ρ) correlation and linear regression analyses with bootstrapping. Nineteen significant correlations were identified between MAIA-y and CERQ-k subscales (ρ = −.724 to.700, p

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Cheung, H. Y. L., Brown, T., Yu, M. L., & Cheung, P. P. P. (2023). The Relationship Between School-Age Children’s Self-Reported Perceptions of Their Interoceptive Awareness and Emotional Regulation: An Exploratory Study. Journal of Occupational Therapy, Schools, and Early Intervention. https://doi.org/10.1080/19411243.2023.2215764

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