textabstractBackground: Some adolescents function poorly in apparently benign environments, while others thrive despite hassles and difficulties. The aim of this study was to examine if adolescents with specialized skills in the recognition of either positive or negative emotions have a context-dependent risk of developing an anxiety or depressive disorder during adolescence, depending on exposure to positive or harsh parenting. Methods: Data came from a large prospective Dutch population study (N = 1539). At age 11, perceived parental rejection and emotional warmth were measured by questionnaire, and emotion recognition skills by means of a reaction-time task. Lifetime diagnoses of anxiety and depressive disorders were assessed at about ag...
This study aimed to examine the effect of emotion recognition training on social anxiety symptoms am...
Background: Although severe irritability is a predictor of future depression according to recent met...
Contemporary cognitive models of depression propose that cognitive biases for negative information a...
markdownabstractBACKGROUND: Some adolescents function poorly in apparently benign environments, whil...
Anxiety and depression, two common disorders in childhood and adolescence, are highly comorbid. Howe...
Emotional awareness is consistently conceptualized as the first step in the process of emotion regul...
Background: There is an established association between parental Expressed Emotion (EE) and mental h...
This study explored the influence of adolescent mood variability on the symptom development of gener...
Emotion regulation skills develop substantially across adolescence, a period characterized by emotio...
Negative emotion differentiation (NED) refers to experiencing negative emotions as being different f...
Adolescence has been identified as a period of heightened emotional reactivity, which is reflected i...
One prominent theory has proposed that rejection and other negative parenting practices prompt child...
Intruduction: The comorbidity between depression and social anxiety is high in adolescence. Parental...
Background: Anxiety disorders are the leading cause of mental illness in adolescence. While anxious ...
Contains fulltext : 158669.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Emotion socia...
This study aimed to examine the effect of emotion recognition training on social anxiety symptoms am...
Background: Although severe irritability is a predictor of future depression according to recent met...
Contemporary cognitive models of depression propose that cognitive biases for negative information a...
markdownabstractBACKGROUND: Some adolescents function poorly in apparently benign environments, whil...
Anxiety and depression, two common disorders in childhood and adolescence, are highly comorbid. Howe...
Emotional awareness is consistently conceptualized as the first step in the process of emotion regul...
Background: There is an established association between parental Expressed Emotion (EE) and mental h...
This study explored the influence of adolescent mood variability on the symptom development of gener...
Emotion regulation skills develop substantially across adolescence, a period characterized by emotio...
Negative emotion differentiation (NED) refers to experiencing negative emotions as being different f...
Adolescence has been identified as a period of heightened emotional reactivity, which is reflected i...
One prominent theory has proposed that rejection and other negative parenting practices prompt child...
Intruduction: The comorbidity between depression and social anxiety is high in adolescence. Parental...
Background: Anxiety disorders are the leading cause of mental illness in adolescence. While anxious ...
Contains fulltext : 158669.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Emotion socia...
This study aimed to examine the effect of emotion recognition training on social anxiety symptoms am...
Background: Although severe irritability is a predictor of future depression according to recent met...
Contemporary cognitive models of depression propose that cognitive biases for negative information a...