Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties vs Sensory Processing Differences
Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties vs Sensory Processing Differences
Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties are about a child's feelings and actions — anxiety, anger, defiance, withdrawal — getting in the way of daily life. Sensory Processing Differences are about how a child's brain registers sensation — sounds, textures, movement — feeling too much, too little or confusing. The behaviour you see can look identical (a meltdown, refusing), but the driver differs: one starts in the emotions, the other in the senses. Many children have both. A simple clue is to ask what came just before — a feeling and relationship, or a sound, texture or movement.
Both can look like a child melting down — but one is about big feelings, and the other is about how the body takes in the world.
In short
Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties describe a child whose feelings and actions — anxiety, anger, defiance, withdrawal, low mood — get in the way of daily life and relationships. Sensory Processing Differences describe a child whose brain registers and responds to sensation differently — sounds feel too loud, textures feel unbearable, or movement is craved constantly. The behaviour you see can look similar (a meltdown, refusing, hitting), but the driver is different: one starts in the emotions, the other starts in the senses. Many children have both, woven together.How they differ in everyday life
With Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties, the trigger is usually social or emotional — a change in routine, a frustration, a fear, or difficulty managing a strong feeling. The child may seem worried, sad, oppositional or easily overwhelmed by situations, and the behaviour often has a recognisable 'story' behind it.With Sensory Processing Differences, the trigger is usually a sensation. A child might cover their ears in a busy shop, gag at certain food textures, hate the feel of clothing tags, spin and crash for more movement, or seem to 'not notice' pain or being called. The reaction is the body responding to too much, too little, or confusing sensory input — not naughtiness or stubbornness.
The overlap is real and important. A child overwhelmed by sensory input will become distressed, anxious or 'behavioural' — and a child with big emotions may become more sensitive to sensation. That is exactly why a calm, professional look matters: the same meltdown can have very different roots, and the right support depends on understanding the cause, not just the behaviour.
A simple way to think about it
Ask gently: what came just before? If it was a feeling, a relationship or a demand, lean towards the emotional picture. If it was a sound, light, texture, smell, taste or movement, lean towards the sensory picture. You don't have to decide alone — noticing the pattern is the helpful part, and a clinician puts the pieces together.The Pinnacle way
This is general guidance, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, never from an app or form. Our team observes how your child feels, responds and regulates, then recommends the right support — drawing on occupational therapy for sensory needs and behavioural therapy for emotional and behavioural ones. Learn more about emotional & behavioural difficulties.Trusted sources
The American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on children's emotional development and behaviour; the American Occupational Therapy guidance summarised by clinicians on how children process and respond to sensation.Next step — Notice the pattern before each meltdown for a week, then book a developmental screening so a clinician can tell apart feelings from sensation and match the right support.
What to watch
Watch what happens just before a meltdown: if it follows a feeling, change of routine or demand, it may be emotional; if it follows a sound, light, texture, smell or movement, it may be sensory. A child who covers ears, gags on textures, hates clothing tags, craves spinning and crashing, or doesn't react to being called may have sensory differences worth a clinician's look.
Try this at home
Keep a simple one-line note before each upset: what was happening, what your child saw, heard or felt. After a week you'll often spot whether feelings or sensations are the common thread — and that pattern is gold for a clinician.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Can a child have both emotional difficulties and sensory differences?
Yes, and it is very common. Sensory overwhelm often leads to distress, anxiety or 'behavioural' reactions, and big emotions can heighten sensitivity to sensation. A clinician untangles which is driving what so support fits your individual child.
How can I tell if my child's meltdown is sensory or emotional?
Notice what came just before. If it followed a feeling, a relationship or a demand, it leans emotional. If it followed a sound, light, texture, smell, taste or movement, it leans sensory. You don't have to decide alone — the pattern you spot helps the clinician.
Which therapy helps each one?
Sensory processing differences are often supported through occupational therapy, while emotional and behavioural difficulties are supported through behavioural therapy and emotional regulation work. Many children benefit from a blend, matched after a proper assessment.