Abstract:
Emotion regulation is the skills and methods required to influence and regulate
adolescents' emotional experiences as their emotional life differs from other stages. It is
assumed to be an essential factor in adolescents' mental health, well-being, and successful
functioning. It significantly influences emotional and behavioral disorders in children and
adolescents. People are prone to behave in a way that leads to desirable outcomes; it is
hypothesized that adolescents' motivation to change maladaptive emotion regulation may
have an impact on increasing effective emotion regulation and mental health. The main
goal of the present study was to investigate the interplay between adolescents' motivation
to change, emotion regulation, and mental health. Specifically, we wanted to see if the
motivation to change significantly impacts effective emotion regulation and if the
motivation to change and mental health can predict emotion regulation. Besides exploring
gender differences for emotion regulation, motivation to change, mental health, and
emotion regulation subscale scores of adolescents. To accomplish the goals of the
research, cross-sectional survey design was employed, and 250 adolescents between the
ages of 12 and 18 were selected for the study using a convenient selection method. All the
participants filled out three questionnaires, which are the Cognitive Emotion Regulation
Questionnaire (CERQ), the University of Rhode Island Change Assessment Scale
(URICA), and the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ). Multiple linear
regression analysis were done to identify the predictors, and an independent sample t-tests
were used to see the gender difference among all variables' scale scores and sub-scales of
emotion regulation. The study results revealed that, in combination, motivation to change,
mental health strength scores, and mental health difficulties scores significantly predicted
effective emotion regulation, and as a unique independent variable, motivation to change significantly predicted effective emotion regulation. The results also showed that there is
no noteworthy gender difference between males and females regarding scores. The
findings of this study have implications for planning adolescent intervention programs to
increase motivation to change maladaptive emotion regulation. Since less adaptive
emotion regulation is a risk factor for developing mental health difficulties in the future,
techniques and more research to increase effective emotion regulation need to be
incorporated.