Emotional Regulation Capability; Social Functioning Adaptation Pathways in Older Adult Groups of The South Asian Subcontinent: An Observational Assessment
- Authors
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Sofie Andersen
Aarhus Institute of Technology, DenmarkAuthor
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- Keywords:
- Emotional regulation, social functioning, older adults, South Asia
- Abstract
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Emotional regulation capability is a central determinant of successful aging, influencing how older adults maintain psychological stability and social functioning across varying environmental and relational contexts. In the South Asian subcontinent, where familial structures, socioeconomic disparities, and health constraints intersect, emotional regulation becomes a critical adaptive mechanism for sustaining social wellbeing.
This study examines emotional regulation capability and social functioning adaptation pathways through an observational analytical framework grounded in emotion theory, computational modeling, and complexity-based social adaptation systems. Emotional regulation is conceptualized as the dynamic process through which individuals modulate emotional intensity, duration, and expression in response to internal and external stimuli. Social functioning adaptation refers to the ability of individuals to maintain effective interpersonal relationships, community participation, and role-based engagement despite psychological and environmental stressors.
The theoretical foundation integrates classical emotion theory, which emphasizes structured emotional categories and psychological appraisal processes (Frijda, 1986; Arnold, 1960), with computational models of emotion regulation that simulate dynamic emotional state transitions (Bosse, Pontier, & Treur, 2010; El Nasr & Yen, 2000). Additionally, complexity-based frameworks of collective adaptation highlight how social systems self-organize under uncertainty and stress, influencing individual adaptation pathways (Kania & Kramer, 2011; Kania & Kramer, 2013).
Findings synthesized from the observational framework indicate that emotional regulation capability significantly influences social functioning stability in older adults. Individuals with higher regulation capacity demonstrate improved interpersonal engagement, reduced emotional volatility, and more stable adaptation trajectories. Conversely, limited regulation capacity is associated with fragmented social participation and reduced adaptive resilience.
The study also identifies nonlinear adaptation pathways, where emotional regulation interacts with social and environmental factors to produce heterogeneous outcomes across populations. Empirical grounding from prior gerontological research supports the role of resilience and psychosocial adjustment in shaping elderly wellbeing outcomes in South Asia (Agarwal, Usha Rani, & V, 2023).
This research contributes to interdisciplinary gerontology by integrating emotional theory, computational modeling, and social systems analysis into a unified observational framework. The findings have implications for mental health interventions, community-based aging programs, and socio-emotional policy design in developing regions.
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- References
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Carnevvale, N. Smith, M. Melton, “STEM,” Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce, October 2011.
M. Arnold, Emotion and Personality Vol. 1 2. Columbia Univ. Press, 1960.
T. Bosse, M. Pontier, and J. Treur, “A computational model based on gross emotion regulation theory,” Cognitive systems research, vol. 11, pp. 211–230, 2010.
Chakraborty, A. Konar, A. Halder, and E. Kim, “Emotion control by audio-visual stimulus using fuzzy automata,” in in proc. IEEE Intl Conf. on Fuzzy systems, 2010.
J. Kania, J. Kramer, “Collective Impact,” Stanford Social Innovation Review, Jan 21, 2011.
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T. Bosse, M. Pontier, and J. Treur, “A computational model based on gross emotion regulation theory,” Cognitive systems research, vol. 11, pp. 211–230, 2010.
Agarwal, R., Usha Rani, B., & V, S. . (2023). RESILIENCE TO STRESS AND PSYCHOSOCIAL ADJUSTMENTS AMONG ELDERS IN INDIA: a DESCRIPTIVE STUDY. European Chemical Bulletin, 12(05), 510–527. https://doi.org/10.48047/ecb/2023.12.si5.051
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- 2025-06-30
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Copyright (c) 2025 Sofie Andersen (Author)

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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