Abstract
BACKGROUND: Based on Self-Determination Theory (SDT) and Embodied Cognition Theory (ECT), this study explores how teacher support influences the generation mechanism of psychological well-being in 'language + body' dual-channel teaching through basic psychological needs and learning motivation as a chain mediator. METHOD: The present study adopted an explanatory sequential mixed-methods design, with a quantitative phase as the primary component and a qualitative phase as the supplementary component. The quantitative phase involved a questionnaire survey with 518 university students, analyzed using Structural Equation Modeling (SEM). The qualitative phase consisted of semi-structured interviews with 16 teachers, with the transcripts analyzed via three-level coding. RESULT: (1) Teacher support has a significant positive impact on basic psychological needs (β = 0.416), learning motivation (β = 0.235), and psychological well-being (β = 0.317); (2) Chain mediation: teacher support indirectly and positively affects psychological well-being through basic psychological needs and learning motivation (β = 0.028), with a total mediation effect of 15.47%; (3) Chain effect of embodied interaction: the physical dimension effectively reduces the cognitive load, while the symbolic dimension reinforces the fulfillment of the needs with cultural translations. CONCLUSION: This study extends the SDT-based chain mediation framework by specifying embodied interaction as a contextual instructional condition, and provides an empirically grounded dual-channel pathway for interdisciplinary instructional design. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s40359-026-04185-2.