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Anxiety-related Attentional Biases in Childhood
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 October 2014
Abstract
Research indicates that highly anxious adults show an attentional bias favouring emotionally threatening over emotionally neutral stimuli. In contrast, low-anxious adults show a bias favouring neutral over threatening stimuli. Such attentional biases may play important roles in the regulation and dysregulation of anxiety. Therefore, they have substantial potential to foster or protect against the development, maintenance, or intensification of anxiety disorders. Evidence from several recent studies suggests that such biases also occur among children. This paper reviews these studies, placing particular emphasis on methodological issues that must be considered when applying methods from studies of adults to children of varying ages.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Behaviour Change , Volume 13 , Issue 4: Special Issue — Part II: Internalising Disorders of Children and Adolescents , December 1996 , pp. 199 - 205
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Author(s) 1996
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