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Completed RESEARCH GRANT UKRI Gateway to Research

Regulating Emotions - Strengthening Adolescent Resilience (RE-STAR)

£33.52M GBP

Funder Strategic Priorities Fund
Recipient Organization King's College London
Country United Kingdom
Start Date Aug 31, 2021
End Date Aug 30, 2025
Duration 1,460 days
Number of Grantees 16
Roles Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator; Award Holder
Data Source UKRI Gateway to Research
Grant ID MR/W002493/1
Grant Description

Many people experience adolescent depression. If we can find out who will do this and understand the reasons why, then we will be in a better position to find ways to support them to become more resilient and help them stop developing depression. This is our goal in Regulating Emotions - Strengthening Adolescent Resilience (RE-STAR).

To achieve this, we will work with groups of people known already to be likely to develop depression during adolescence - those with high levels of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD); both those with diagnoses and those with high levels of these characteristics with no diagnoses - referred to overall as young people with neuroatypicalities (YPN). In RE-STAR, we will be especially interested in whether YPN who develop depression by late adolescence already show differences in how they react emotionally to challenges they experience in their day-to-day lives in early adolescence.

We chose this focus because we know that YPN often have difficulties controlling their emotions when facing challenges and because emotional problems in early adolescence can lead to adolescent depression in other groups.

In RE-STAR, different experts will work together in a team including scientists, artists, teachers and doctors. They will work with YPN themselves who will be part of our Youth Researcher Panel. RE-STAR will place YPN's views, based on their day-to-day experiences, at the heart of its work to make sure it has an authentic view of the emotional challenges YPN face.

We will learn about these experiences by listening to YPN discuss them but also through their performance in plays, dance and creative writing. This will then guide our search for the underlying reasons why YPN have difficulties controlling their emotions and how these change during adolescence and if - and how - they become linked to depression. RE-STAR will focus on YPN's experiences at school.

This is because YPN face some of their most significant emotional challenges there. At the same time, school offers a great place to work with YPN to help them to deal with these challenges more effectively. Crucially, YPN will be involved in RE-STAR throughout.

Our Youth Researcher Panel members will be actively engaged in shaping the research questions, designing the studies, collecting data and interpreting findings in the light of their experiences. They will also fully contribute to the co-development of our new approach to helping YPN handle emotional challenges better to stop them developing depression.

RE-STAR will have 6 work packages (WPs). In WP1 we will work with YPN to develop a new way of measuring emotion regulation difficulties - the Emotion Regulation in Neurodiversity Index (ERNI) - based on YPN's own accounts of their experiences. In WP2, based on this new understanding, we will conduct experiments to explore how YPN's difficulties in emotion regulation are linked to differences in their minds, brains and bodies.

This will be followed in WP3 by a study of the way emotion regulation abilities change during adolescence and how this becomes linked to the experience of depression - especially when individuals are faced with daily hassles and stressors. In WP4 we will use creative performance-based practices to delve deeper into YPN's understanding of their experiences and how this impacts, and is impacted by, emotion regulation and mental health.

WP5 will focus on the school as a context for YPN's emotion regulation challenges to build a platform for effective intervention. Finally, in WP6 the key findings from the prior WPs will be brought together to shape the new school-based strategy to improve YPN's ability to handle emotional challenges and provide them with skills to help them reduce depression.

Throughout RE-STAR we will ask how people with ADHD and ASD are similar and/or different from one another and whether they need different sorts of support with emotion regulation.

All Grantees

King's College London; University College London; Queen Mary University of London; Nhs England; Place2Be; Royal Central Sch of Speech and Drama; Cardiff University; Adhd Foundation

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