Background. To examine the role of parental psychopathology and family environment for the risk of social anxiety disorder (SAD) in offspring from childhood to early adulthood, covering an observational period of 10 years. Method. A community sample of 1,395 adolescents (aged 14 to 17 years at baseline) was prospectively followed-up over the core high risk period for SAD onset. DSM-IV offspring and parental psychopathology was assessed using the Munich-Composite International Diagnostic Interview; direct diagnostic interviews in parents were supplemented by family history reports from offspring. Parental rearing was assessed by the Questionnaire of Recalled Rearing Behavior in offspring, family functioning by the McMaster Family Assessment...
The study investigated the role of parental anxiety symptoms in treatment outcomes for children with...
Parents' fear of negative child evaluation (FNCE) by others has been proposed as a mechanism explain...
In this thesis, several psychosocial factors associated with internalizing symptoms in adolescence w...
Background. To examine the role of parental psychopathology and family environment for the risk of s...
We examined parental psychopathology and family environment in subthreshold and DSM-IV threshold con...
Parental psychopathology and unfavorable family environment are established risk factors for onset o...
Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) is an anxiety disorder in which people have intense fear of being judg...
Background Familial risk factors have been implicated in the development of mental health problems i...
BACKGROUND:Social anxiety is thought to be strongly related to maladaptive emotion regulation (ER). ...
ObjectiveResearch has examined the effects of parental psychopathology, family functioning, and care...
4noSocial anxiety typically occurs between mid-childhood and early adolescence and it is influenced ...
Background Familial risk factors have been implicated in the development of mental health problems i...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2008.Much emphasis has been placed on parental contri...
This study concurrently examined the relationship between adolescents’ perceptions of their parents’...
Background: Anxiety runs in families. Observational learning of anxious behavior from ...
The study investigated the role of parental anxiety symptoms in treatment outcomes for children with...
Parents' fear of negative child evaluation (FNCE) by others has been proposed as a mechanism explain...
In this thesis, several psychosocial factors associated with internalizing symptoms in adolescence w...
Background. To examine the role of parental psychopathology and family environment for the risk of s...
We examined parental psychopathology and family environment in subthreshold and DSM-IV threshold con...
Parental psychopathology and unfavorable family environment are established risk factors for onset o...
Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) is an anxiety disorder in which people have intense fear of being judg...
Background Familial risk factors have been implicated in the development of mental health problems i...
BACKGROUND:Social anxiety is thought to be strongly related to maladaptive emotion regulation (ER). ...
ObjectiveResearch has examined the effects of parental psychopathology, family functioning, and care...
4noSocial anxiety typically occurs between mid-childhood and early adolescence and it is influenced ...
Background Familial risk factors have been implicated in the development of mental health problems i...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2008.Much emphasis has been placed on parental contri...
This study concurrently examined the relationship between adolescents’ perceptions of their parents’...
Background: Anxiety runs in families. Observational learning of anxious behavior from ...
The study investigated the role of parental anxiety symptoms in treatment outcomes for children with...
Parents' fear of negative child evaluation (FNCE) by others has been proposed as a mechanism explain...
In this thesis, several psychosocial factors associated with internalizing symptoms in adolescence w...