Lydia  Tian
Lydia Tian

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Lead supervisor:
Dr Amy Paine

Other supervisor(s):

  • Prof Katherine Shelton
  • Prof Stephanie Van Goozen

Start date: September 2022

Award: Collaborative

Subject Pathway:
Psychology

Thematic Cluster:
Language, Learning and Behaviour Cluster


In partnership with:

  • Health and Care Research Wales Health and Care Research Wales

Emotion Recognition in Looked After Children in Wales: An Investigation and Intervention Study

“In Wales, 109 per 10,000 children are ‘looked after’ because their birth family are unable to care for them. Most will have experienced abuse or neglect in the birth family environment, placing them at greater risk for developing mental health problems that can endure into later life (Wales Centre for Public Policy, 2021).

Understanding the processes that might underpin a child’s mental health problems can provide avenues for intervention to offset risk trajectories before disorder may emerge (DeJong, 2010). Emotion recognition is fundamental to social relationships, and impairment in emotion recognition is a transdiagnostic risk factor for a range of psychiatric disorders(Burley et al., 2021). Children adopted from public care show impairments in emotion recognition that are linked to their mental health problems (Paine et al., 2021). With their likelihood of experiencing early life adversity and instability, looked after children represent a vulnerable group.”

In my research, I will explore (1) whether looked after children have difficulties in emotion recognition, (2) whether an emotion recognition training can improve any difficulties, and (3) whether any improvements maintain after six months.