The aim of this study is to examine, for the first time, the efficacy of a new intervention model for child-led emotion regulation -Purrble- that could be deployed across prevention and treatment contexts.
Background: Emotion regulation is a key transdiagnostic risk factor for a range of psychopathologies, making it a prime target for both prevention and treatment interventions in childhood. Existing interventions predominantly rely on workshop or in-person therapy-based approaches, limiting the ability to promote emotion regulation competence for children in everyday settings and at scale. Purrble is a newly developed, inexpensive socially assistive robot-in the form of an interactive plush toy-which uses haptic feedback to support in-the-moment emotion regulation. It is accessible to children as needed in their daily lives, without the requirement for a priori training. While qualitative data from prior studies show high engagement in-situ and anecdotal evidence of the robot being incorporated into children's emotion regulation routines, there is so far no quantitative evidence of the intervention's impact on child outcomes. Objective: The aim of this study is to examine, for the first time, the efficacy of a new intervention model for child-led emotion regulation-Purrble-that could be deployed across prevention and treatment contexts. Methods: A total of 120 children aged 8-10 will be selected from an 'enriched' non-clinical US population: for inclusion, the cutoff for parent's rating of child dysregulation will be 10 points or higher on the total difficulties score on the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire. This cutoff selects for a measurable-but not necessarily clinical-level of the child's emotion regulatory difficulties. The selected families will be randomly assigned with .5 probability to receive either Purrble or an active control (non-interactive plush toy). The primary outcome will be a daily EMA measure of child emotion regulation capability (as reported by parents) over a period of 4 weeks. Exploratory analysis will investigate the intervention impact on secondary outcomes of child emotion regulation, collected weekly over the same 4 week period, with follow-ups at 1 month and 6 months post-deployment. Quantitative data will be analysed on an intent-to-treat basis. A proportion of families (\~30% of the sample) will be interviewed post-deployment as part of process analysis.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
120
The objective of this study is to evaluate the impact of having access to the Purrble intervention, compared to an active control in the form of a non-interactive plush toy, on child daily emotion regulation (primary outcome) as well as a range of secondary outcomes over a period of one month. The investigators hypothesise that engagement with an in-situ, 'bottom-up' emotion regulation intervention which enables in-the-moment soothing for children, will lead to measurable changes in child self-regulatory behaviours over time.
The selected active control toy is the Wild Republic 8'' Hedgehog animal. The selection process was guided by: the plush toy needed to have analogous size, weight, quality of materials, and at least similar (if not higher) visual appeal. The investigators also made sure to include the design characteristics our prior work suggested were important for the narrative around the toy. These were selecting a similarly stylised animal (to enable emotion projection and feelings of care), as well as no visible mouth on the toy (to prevent setting an expectation about the toy's emotional state as a mouth would imply an emotional expression). Additionally, the investigators have adapted the one-page parent-facing descriptions of the narrative that come with Purrble also for the active control unit: as such, the active control families will receive the same general narrative-without the explicit mentions of the toy interactivity-and the same suggested activities for parents.
Perceived child emotion regulation ability
Composite end-of-day 4-item parent-report measure of the perceived child emotion regulation ability throughout the day. The composite score for each day will be computed as the mean value across the 4 items: * Today, to what extent was the participant's child able to take difficult things in stride? * Today, to what extent did the participant's child get easily triggered or upset? * Today, to what extent was the participant's child able to calm down easily if upset? * Today, to what extent did the participant's child get very emotional even after the littlest things? These items were selected as tapping into the proximal emotion regulation behaviour that (a) would be affected if the intervention is effective, (b) directly observable by parents, (c) state-based to enable daily measurement, (d) connected to the intervention theory of change.
Time frame: Daily, for the 4-week long deployment period
Daily parent-report EMA -- child daily mood (mDES)
Measured by selected mDES (Fredrickson et al 2003) emotion triplets, balancing 2 negative and 2 positive sets, whilst being informed by prior qualitative studies. The items are listed below, all measured on a visual analogue scale with not at all and extremely as the anchors.
Time frame: Daily, for the 4-week long deployment period
Daily parent-report EMA -- daily engagement
Daily engagement item asks about general perception of engagement with the toy ("How much did the participant's child play with the toy today?", measured on a visual analogue scale with \<not even once\> and \<they were inseparable\> as the anchors).
Time frame: Daily, for the 4-week long deployment period
Daily parent-report EMA -- reaction to triggering events
Series of explorative items examining the child's reaction after potentially triggering events. The investigators will first ask the parents "Did anything happen today that would typically upset the participant's child?". The purpose of these items to gain qualitative understanding of the toys' use around challenging situations and to guide post-deployment interviews.
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Time frame: Daily, for the 4-week long deployment period
Weekly questionnaires for parents -- child emotion regulation (SDQ)
These include parent reports on distal outcomes of parent-reported emotional and behavioural difficulties of the child will be measured by the 25-item Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ).
Time frame: at baseline (just before intervention/control toys are delivered); and then weekly for a period of one month (end of week 1, week 2, week 3, week 4); and then at 1-month and 6-month follow-up.
Weekly questionnaires for parents -- child emotion regulation (ERC)
These include parent reports on distal outcomes of parent-reported emotion regulation lability and competence will be measured by the 24-item Emotion Regulation Checklist (ERC) questionnaire.
Time frame: at baseline (just before intervention/control toys are delivered); and then weekly for a period of one month (end of week 1, week 2, week 3, week 4); and then at 1-month and 6-month follow-up.
Weekly questionnaires for parents -- engagement (TWEETS)
Parent-reported behavioural, cognitive, and affective engagement with the intervention will be measured by an adapted version of the TWEETS questionnaire, a new, promising instrument specifically designed to measure engagement with digital mental health interventions, with good reliability in prior studies.
Time frame: weekly for a period of one month (end of week 1, week 2, week 3, week 4); and then at 1-month and 6-month follow-up.
Weekly questionnaires for children (DERS)
Child-reported emotion dysregulation will be measured by a shortened version of Brief Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS), following prior work with children of similar ages (Schneider et al 2020). DERS has been developed to measure clinically relevant difficulties in emotion regulation, across 6 factor-analytically-derived subscales. The DERS questionnaire has been used extensively to facilitate understanding of how emotion dysregulation is associated with psychiatric symptoms, and to measure treatment progress.
Time frame: 5 data points collected: at baseline, and end of week 1, week 2, week 3 and week 4
Weekly questionnaires for children (ER beliefs)
Child-reported beliefs about emotion regulation will be measured by an adapted ER beliefs questionnaire (Ford et al 2017), asking children to pick one out of four statements (e.g., "I cannot control my feelings at all"; "I can control my feelings a little"; "I can control my feelings a lot"; I can control my feelings all the time") rather using the original Likert scale statements asking about agreement.
Time frame: 5 data points collected: at baseline, and end of week 1, week 2, week 3 and week 4