Background: Adults with anxiety show biased categorization and avoidance of threats. Such biases may emerge through complex interplay between genetics and environments, occurring early in life. Research on threat biases in children has focuses on a restricted range of biases, with insufficient focus on genetic and environmental origins. Here, we explore differences between children with and without anxiety problems in under-studied areas of threat bias. We focused both on associations with anxious phenotype and the underlying gene-environmental correlates for two specific processes: the categorisation of threat faces and avoidance learning. Method: Two-hundred and fifty 10-year old MZ and DZ twin pairs (500 individuals) completed task...
Several researchers have proposed a causal relation between biased attention to threat and the devel...
OBJECTIVES: Anxiety leads to biases in processing personally relevant information. This study se...
Research suggests anxious children display increased attentional biases for threat-related stimuli. ...
BACKGROUND: Adults with anxiety show biased categorization and avoidance of threats. Such biases may...
Background: Twin studies in children reveal that familial aggregation of anxiety disorders is due to...
This paper explores whether the increased vulnerability of children of anxious parents to develop an...
This paper explores whether the increased vulnerability of children of anxious parents to develop an...
1 Background Considerable research links threat‐related attention biases to anxiety symptoms in adul...
Objective: to examine attention bias towards threat faces in a large sample of anxiety-disorderedyou...
Extensive research has examined attentional bias for threat in anxious adults and school-aged childr...
Extensive research has examined attentional bias for threat in anxious adults and school-aged childr...
Attention bias for threatening information is an acknowledged factor that plays a causal or maintain...
The present study examined processing bias in children suffering from anxiety disorders. Processing ...
Research suggests that anxious children display increased attentional biases for threat-related stim...
Research investigating anxiety-related attentional bias for emotional information in anxious and non...
Several researchers have proposed a causal relation between biased attention to threat and the devel...
OBJECTIVES: Anxiety leads to biases in processing personally relevant information. This study se...
Research suggests anxious children display increased attentional biases for threat-related stimuli. ...
BACKGROUND: Adults with anxiety show biased categorization and avoidance of threats. Such biases may...
Background: Twin studies in children reveal that familial aggregation of anxiety disorders is due to...
This paper explores whether the increased vulnerability of children of anxious parents to develop an...
This paper explores whether the increased vulnerability of children of anxious parents to develop an...
1 Background Considerable research links threat‐related attention biases to anxiety symptoms in adul...
Objective: to examine attention bias towards threat faces in a large sample of anxiety-disorderedyou...
Extensive research has examined attentional bias for threat in anxious adults and school-aged childr...
Extensive research has examined attentional bias for threat in anxious adults and school-aged childr...
Attention bias for threatening information is an acknowledged factor that plays a causal or maintain...
The present study examined processing bias in children suffering from anxiety disorders. Processing ...
Research suggests that anxious children display increased attentional biases for threat-related stim...
Research investigating anxiety-related attentional bias for emotional information in anxious and non...
Several researchers have proposed a causal relation between biased attention to threat and the devel...
OBJECTIVES: Anxiety leads to biases in processing personally relevant information. This study se...
Research suggests anxious children display increased attentional biases for threat-related stimuli. ...