anxiety Is An Emotion That Appears Early In Childhood And Follows A Typical Developmental Course. This Book Provides A Comprehensive Overview Of Relevant Theory And Research Related To The Origins Of Information Processing Biases And Its Contribution To clinical Levels Of Anxiety in Children And Ad
Information Processing Biases and Anxiety || Genetics
✍ Scribed by Hadwin, Julie A.; Field, Andy P.
- Publisher
- John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 630 KB
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Article
- ISBN
- 0470998199
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Anxiety disorders affect 25% of individuals at some point during their childhood and adolescence (Costello, Egger and Angold, 2005;Meltzer et al., 2000) and commonly continue into adulthood (Gregory
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The question of the process of intergenerational transmission of anxiety has received increasing research attention in recent years. The aim of this chapter is to review the evidence that relates to one aspect of this process, namely, the intergenerational transmission of an anxious information proc
anxiety Is An Emotion That Appears Early In Childhood And Follows A Typical Developmental Course. This Book Provides A Comprehensive Overview Of Relevant Theory And Research Related To The Origins Of Information Processing Biases And Its Contribution To clinical Levels Of Anxiety in Children And Ad
anxiety Is An Emotion That Appears Early In Childhood And Follows A Typical Developmental Course. This Book Provides A Comprehensive Overview Of Relevant Theory And Research Related To The Origins Of Information Processing Biases And Its Contribution To clinical Levels Of Anxiety in Children And Ad
anxiety Is An Emotion That Appears Early In Childhood And Follows A Typical Developmental Course. This Book Provides A Comprehensive Overview Of Relevant Theory And Research Related To The Origins Of Information Processing Biases And Its Contribution To clinical Levels Of Anxiety in Children And Ad
## Learning Cognitive Biases We have seen throughout this book that there is compelling evidence that anxiety vulnerability is associated with distinctive patterns of attentional and interpretive bias. Clinical and experimental theories assume that these processing biases represent a causal substr