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Alessandro Lazzarelli

Department of Civilizations and Forms of Knowledge, University of Pisa, 56126 Pisa, Italy.

3 papers in the library · 30 citations · publishing 2024-2026

Papers

Interoceptive Ability and Emotion Regulation in Mind-Body Interventions: An Integrative Review.

Behavioral sciences (Basel, Switzerland) November 18, 2024 Alessandro Lazzarelli, Francesca Scafuto, Cristiano Crescentini et al. 30 citations

Interoceptive ability—detecting and interpreting body signals—can be trained through mind-body interventions and is central to emotion regulation. Mindfulness meditation improves both interoceptive ability and emotion regulation via top-down brain-body processing. Interventions using bottom-up processing through body movement and emotional expression remain under-investigated. The authors argue that interoceptive ability is a crucial aspect linking mind-body interventions to emotion regulation and suggest that studying it with both quantitative and qualitative methods could integrate top-down and bottom-up emotion processing, observational and non-observational body awareness, and conscious and unconscious levels of interoception.

Mind the Motion: Feasibility and Effects of a Qigong Intervention on Interoception and Well-Being in Young Adults.

Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland) January 13, 2026 Rebecca Ciacchini, Alessandro Lazzarelli, Giorgia Papini et al.

A 12-week Qigong program for Italian university students was feasible and associated with improvements in mental health and well-being. Of 332 enrolled undergraduates, 114 completed the intervention, which combined static and dynamic Neidan Qigong exercises. Self-report measures showed consistent improvements across mindfulness, interoceptive ability, perceived stress, depression, anxiety, emotion regulation, alexithymia, and sleep quality. The findings are preliminary and uncontrolled, so further research with rigorous designs is needed to confirm stability over time and clarify the role of spontaneous movement.

Do Contemplative Practices Promote Trauma Recovery? A Narrative Review from 2018 to 2023.

Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland) November 7, 2025 Francesca Scafuto, Rossella Mattea Quinto, Graziella Orrù et al.

A narrative review of 42 studies found that contemplative practices—including mindfulness, yoga, tai chi, qigong, and meditation—can reduce trauma-related symptoms such as reactivity, intrusion, hyperarousal, and negative cognitions and mood in both adults and youths. Mindfulness was the most studied approach. Evidence on avoidance symptoms and physiological measures was mixed. The authors suggest combining contemplative practices with trauma-focused psychotherapy to improve emotional expression, awareness of fear and shame, and metacognitive processes, thereby supporting healing of the self and restoring trust.