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Exploring Self-Regulation in Neurodevelopmental Disorders

March 2, 2026
in Psychology & Psychiatry
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In the realm of neurodevelopmental conditions (NDCs), the concept of self-regulation emerges as both a critical and elusive construct. Despite its recognized importance in shaping adaptive functioning across emotional, cognitive, and behavioral domains, self-regulation remains inconsistently defined, limiting the coherence of research findings and clinical interventions. A recently published comprehensive overview of reviews, appearing in Nature Human Behaviour, tackles this ambiguity by synthesizing the conceptual underpinnings and measurement practices of self-regulation across major NDC populations such as autism, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and intellectual disability.

This landmark study employed a rigorous PRISMA-aligned methodology with preregistration (CRD42023350582), reflecting an advanced meta-synthetic approach that reviews the available synthesized literature rather than individual studies alone. In doing so, it examined 47 peer-reviewed reviews—consisting of narrative, scoping, systematic, and meta-analytic types—covering human studies that address the multi-domain nature of self-regulation. This expansive dataset presents a uniquely broad yet detailed view of how self-regulation has been conceptualized, operationalized, and measured within diverse neurodevelopmental frameworks.

One of the core revelations of this overview lies in the apparent terminological variability that clouds the field. Although self-regulation is instrumental in modulating internal states and external behaviors, the term itself is peppered with synonyms and overlapping constructs, hindering cross-study comparability. However, despite this terminological scatter, the notion of ‘dysregulation’ emerged as a consistently elevated phenotype across NDCs, reinforcing its role as a hallmark deficit that transcends diagnostic boundaries.

Through inductive content analysis of included reviews, the authors identified a constellation of core psychological constructs central to self-regulation. These encompass processes spanning emotional modulation, executive cognitive control, and goal-directed behavioral adjustments. The findings underscore the interdependent and transactional nature of these processes within developmental trajectories and environmental contexts, illuminating a complex, dynamic architecture rather than segmented domains.

Notably, the review outs an integrative framework for self-regulation that is domain-general and transdiagnostic. This model posits that emotional, cognitive, and behavioral regulatory processes work synergistically across different environments—from familial settings to educational and social milieus—to enable flexible and contextually adaptive responses. By shifting the lens toward this holistic perspective, the authors challenge prevailing compartmentalized approaches that isolate self-regulatory deficits as distinct symptom clusters tied narrowly to specific diagnoses.

Measurement practices in the field revealed significant reliance on informant-report methodologies, with parent-report questionnaires forming the backbone of assessment tools. The meta-summary component of the review collated data from 332 primary empirical studies, highlighting an overrepresentation of subjective measures and exposing gaps in objective and multi-modal assessments. This reliance on proxy reports raises concerns about validity and generalizability, especially given the heterogeneity observed in methodologies and risk of bias, which the review meticulously appraised using the Joanna Briggs Institute checklist.

This methodological heterogeneity is a critical barrier to the advancement of self-regulation research. The reviewed studies display wide variations in measurement tools, sample characteristics, and analytic approaches, thereby complicating efforts to synthesize findings or generate unified intervention strategies. Moreover, self-regulation’s multi-dimensionality demands tools that can capture fluctuations across contexts and developmental stages, an area currently underserved by the extant literature.

The authors’ emphasis on a developmental perspective is particularly noteworthy. Neurodevelopmental conditions are inherently dynamic, characterized by evolving cognitive and emotional profiles that interact with environmental forces over time. By framing self-regulation through this developmental lens, the overview advocates for longitudinal study designs and age-sensitive measures capable of tracking regulatory processes and their disruptions across critical periods.

Environmental and contextual factors also play a pivotal role in shaping self-regulatory capacities, as highlighted in this synthesis. The interplay between individual neurocognitive profiles and external supports—such as caregiving quality, educational accommodations, and social inclusion—emerges as a determinant of regulatory outcomes. This contextual sensitivity calls for multidisciplinary approaches integrating neuroscience, psychology, education, and social policy to holistically address self-regulation deficits.

Another salient aspect of the overview is its transdiagnostic approach, which challenges the siloed nature of neurodevelopmental research. By illustrating that dysregulation manifests similarly across autism, ADHD, and intellectual disability, albeit through distinct phenotypic expressions, the study supports a shift toward domain-general frameworks. This paradigm encourages the development of interventions that target fundamental regulatory processes rather than disorder-specific symptomatology, promising broader applicability and greater efficacy.

The implications for intervention strategies are profound. Mapping self-regulation as an integrative system directs attention toward multimodal therapeutic techniques designed to concurrently address emotional, cognitive, and behavioral components. Furthermore, personalized interventions tailored to developmental stage and environmental context can optimize outcomes. The review’s findings provide an evidence-based scaffold for refining assessment tools and designing better-aligned clinical protocols.

This comprehensive synthesis also serves as a call to action for future research. It underscores the urgent need for standardization in terminology, operational definitions, and measurement instruments to alleviate heterogeneity that hampers progress. Additionally, expanding the array of objective, ecologically valid assessments—including physiological, neuroimaging, and real-world behavioral metrics—could deepen our understanding of self-regulation’s mechanisms and manifestations in NDCs.

In summary, this expansive overview reframes self-regulation as a multifaceted, integrative construct rooted in both innate neurodevelopmental processes and extrinsic environmental interactions. It charts a conceptual and methodological path forward, illuminating how aligning research frameworks, improving measurement precision, and embracing developmental and contextual complexities can enhance the science and treatment of neurodevelopmental conditions. As the field evolves, these insights promise to inform more nuanced scientific inquiry and more effective, individualized clinical care for those navigating the challenges of self-regulatory difficulties.

The study stands as a pivotal contribution, bridging scattered findings and divergent perspectives into a cohesive narrative that emphasizes the universal and essential nature of self-regulation across neurodevelopmental diagnoses. By doing so, it not only enriches theoretical understanding but also paves the way for innovations in assessment and intervention capable of transforming lives affected by autism, ADHD, intellectual disability, and related conditions.


Subject of Research: Self-regulation in neurodevelopmental conditions (autism, ADHD, intellectual disability)

Article Title: The conceptual landscape of self-regulation in neurodevelopmental conditions: an overview of reviews

Article References: Iturmendi-Sabater, I., Jain, S., Turcany-Diaz, S. et al. Nat Hum Behav (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-026-02410-x

Image Credits: AI Generated

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-026-02410-x

Tags: adaptive functioning in neurodevelopmental conditionsADHD and self-regulation challengesclinical implications of self-regulation researchconceptual frameworks of self-regulationemotional and cognitive self-regulationmeta-synthesis on self-regulationPRISMA methodology in neurodevelopmental researchself-regulation in autismself-regulation in intellectual disabilityself-regulation in neurodevelopmental disordersself-regulation measurement methodsterminological variability in self-regulation studies
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