Behavioral inhibition and anxiety disorders: multiple levels of a resilience process.
about
Gaining insight into adolescent vulnerability for social anxiety from developmental cognitive neuroscienceA developmental neuroscience perspective on affect-biased attentionMaternal Over-Control Moderates the Association Between Early Childhood Behavioral Inhibition and Adolescent Social Anxiety SymptomsBehavioral Inhibition: Temperament or Prodrome?Impact of childhood trauma and affective temperament on resilience in bipolar disorder.Longitudinal trajectories of social reticence with unfamiliar peers across early childhoodSocial anxiety disorder: a critical overview of neurocognitive research.Early risk factors and developmental pathways to chronic high inhibition and social anxiety disorder in adolescence.The effect of temperament and neuropsychological functioning on behavior problems in children with new-onset seizures.Lasting associations between early-childhood temperament and late-adolescent reward-circuitry response to peer feedback.Temperament and the environment in the etiology of childhood anxiety.Microtrial methods for translating gene-environment dynamics into preventive interventions.Associations Between Behavioral Inhibition and Children's Social Problem Solving Behavior During Social ExclusionDifferential susceptibility to environmental influences: Interactions between child temperament and parenting in adolescent alcohol useCareer unreadiness in relation to anxiety and authoritarian parenting among undergraduates.Infant temperament and high-risk environment relate to behavior problems and language in toddlersAnger and Approach Motivation in Infancy: Relations to Early Childhood Inhibitory Control and Behavior Problems.Cognitive control moderates early childhood temperament in predicting social behavior in 7-year-old children: an ERP studyProspective relations among fearful temperament, protective parenting, and social withdrawal: the role of maternal accuracy in a moderated mediation framework.Parental negative control moderates the shyness-emotion regulation pathway to school-age internalizing symptomsInfant attachment security and early childhood behavioral inhibition interact to predict adolescent social anxiety symptomsAllostatic and environmental load in toddlers predicts anxiety in preschool and kindergartenPreliminary evaluation of a multimodal early intervention program for behaviorally inhibited preschoolers.Temperament and Parenting Styles in Early Childhood Differentially Influence Neural Response to Peer Evaluation in Adolescence.Temperamental exuberance and executive function predict propensity for risk taking in childhood.Attention Biases Towards and Away from Threat Mark the Relation between Early Dysregulated Fear and the Later Emergence of Social Withdrawal.Inhibition and exuberance in preschool classrooms: associations with peer social experiences and changes in cortisol across the preschool yearStriatal functional alteration during incentive anticipation in pediatric anxiety disorders.Early childhood behavioral inhibition, adult psychopathology and the buffering effects of adolescent social networks: a twenty-year prospective study.Reactive and self-regulatory dimensions of temperament: Interactive relations with symptoms of general distress and anhedonia.Cognitive risk profiles for anxiety disorders in a high-risk populationDevelopmental changes of rhesus monkeys in response to separation from the motherBehaviorally inhibited temperament is associated with severity of post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms and faster eyeblink conditioning in veteransDecline in the Quality of Family Relationships Predicts Escalation in Children's Internalizing Symptoms from Middle to Late Childhood.Factor structure of the Children's Behavior Questionnaire in children with Williams syndrome.The Unique and Shared Genetic and Environmental Contributions to Fear, Anger, and Sadness in ChildhoodImpact of attention biases to threat and effortful control on individual variations in negative affect and social withdrawal in very young children.Watch what I do, not what I say I do: Computer-based avatars to assess behavioral inhibition, a vulnerability factor for anxiety disorders.Temperament and Attention as Core Mechanisms in the Early Emergence of Anxiety.Maternal Encouragement to Approach Novelty: A Curvilinear Relation to Change in Anxiety for Inhibited Toddlers
P2860
Q27012151-84AAF5A9-C555-40BD-98B0-0CA5F6D5CA79Q28079001-1A8686B2-C7C1-4804-A9D4-79590D09B9ADQ30048104-3130F9B1-D79D-42DA-9569-E2B4EFCD3CDFQ30403691-4E9613DD-D0B5-4AD8-9F95-ABEED8E820B8Q30418007-0A0E6AB5-2BD9-4349-A56B-EFF09877CC2EQ30587473-5B0B4735-E2FF-40FE-9A80-C71B8A86300CQ31103960-4ADFE642-7D99-4B9A-802B-DE89F7E065CFQ33590550-3558C2C2-6F45-41D8-A8E6-383A38209E3AQ33812122-3CE4CE1A-932E-4E92-B601-33E81E6A80A0Q33895850-024CB9AF-0351-4057-B840-3886C1F4486EQ33907505-51E2F5BB-B10D-4AF2-837C-082CAC6E464DQ34112670-5E6CFC77-EBD8-49B5-B1F5-47F733A993CEQ34404706-788FD8AE-91C8-4F5B-B1FA-15B180C94A09Q34478760-CDBAC183-46E0-4D68-B080-CFB5361EC34DQ34532069-7B0A3A91-674E-483D-B6A8-8EF38D4D4CA4Q34985298-2F519BAB-099F-49F5-9DBA-424E6266554AQ35100364-60C4B187-600D-4681-9312-51B887327205Q35101800-982D9EF0-1B75-4A53-A1E6-0B61D31829EAQ35156904-7F53A669-7A53-4C67-B2A7-A2F3B601E4DCQ35172229-E9B0A8E7-7C18-4B99-BAE7-B97E93451246Q35224384-E1EABEF5-C749-48BE-9E41-C558576774AEQ35452175-FFEEB324-6EEC-4922-93C4-4CA2AEFFB4D0Q35655836-A3627BB4-E69E-44B2-87DF-1F59EEBFC389Q35744308-860DFC11-8B5B-4398-8C32-CC7F2DD40AC6Q35747914-F2375F9F-B202-4998-9340-C98734CAAB86Q35748888-C35D72D1-1B11-4AA6-84D8-9FEE9C6C11B9Q35838761-7875DF8F-3747-4F1D-8026-5DDCC1D4D726Q35839090-1A930216-2482-4DE4-BBF1-2B816A7B2825Q35921065-B01608E9-E890-4538-927C-BB39EA9ABA45Q35949878-440421E0-6FCA-4C81-9F02-3936F12B7FF6Q35988562-862DB840-D3EB-4A4B-8E05-C70D0F07EB38Q35992116-F1F70498-AC08-4EC6-8037-C9EDCEB017A3Q35999703-5EDD6CEB-F228-4781-A55D-9CC15667479AQ36032842-6E1F997F-53B5-4970-995B-4AC1AF28247DQ36040714-7DDCE1D0-D1C8-46C6-849C-5AB5FBA91EA7Q36054328-CCEA9183-4097-48F0-8FF6-6A054A2393C2Q36235835-BF710AB9-E201-4B1C-AD2C-12F95FEDE5BBQ36326613-B2480823-0691-40FF-BBA3-5EB45E7D2E55Q36351693-A6BD9D99-377D-43D0-BA81-F1FAA8F5F77AQ36359791-1B3EBC8F-5C5B-49C5-B5CA-2B08688F3670
P2860
Behavioral inhibition and anxiety disorders: multiple levels of a resilience process.
description
2007 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2007年の論文
@ja
2007年学术文章
@wuu
2007年学术文章
@zh-cn
2007年学术文章
@zh-hans
2007年学术文章
@zh-my
2007年学术文章
@zh-sg
2007年學術文章
@yue
2007年學術文章
@zh
2007年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Behavioral inhibition and anxiety disorders: multiple levels of a resilience process.
@en
Behavioral inhibition and anxiety disorders: multiple levels of a resilience process.
@nl
type
label
Behavioral inhibition and anxiety disorders: multiple levels of a resilience process.
@en
Behavioral inhibition and anxiety disorders: multiple levels of a resilience process.
@nl
prefLabel
Behavioral inhibition and anxiety disorders: multiple levels of a resilience process.
@en
Behavioral inhibition and anxiety disorders: multiple levels of a resilience process.
@nl
P1476
Behavioral inhibition and anxiety disorders: multiple levels of a resilience process.
@en
P2093
Kathryn Amey Degnan
Nathan A Fox
P304
P356
10.1017/S0954579407000363
P577
2007-01-01T00:00:00Z