Background Gangemi, Mancini, and van den Hout (2012) argued that anxious patients use safety behaviors as information that the situation in which the safety behaviors are displayed is dangerous, even when that situation is objectively safe. This was concluded from a vignette study in which anxious patients and non-clinical controls rated the dangerousness of scripts that were safe or dangerous and in which the protagonist did or did not display safety behaviors. Patients were more likely to take safety behavior as evidence that the situation was dangerous, especially in safe situations. Their non-clinical group may not have been psychologically naïve. We critically replicated the Gangemi et al. study using a psychologically non-informed con...
The aim of this qualitative study was to gain an in-depth understanding of experiences and reactions...
Research in the anxiety disorders has shown that safety behaviors function to maintain pathological ...
Available evidence suggests that both Anxiety Sensitivity (AS) and Experiential Avoidance (EA) are g...
Background Gangemi, Mancini, and van den Hout (2012) argued that anxious patients use safety behavio...
Avoidance is a hallmark symptom and a primary maintaining factor in anxiety disorders. Theories of a...
Safety behaviors are a strategy many individualswith anxiety disorders develop to reduce anxiety and...
Cognitive models suggest that social anxiety disorder (SAD) is maintained through the use of safety ...
Anxiety disorders are the most common mental health problem, affect individuals across the lifespan,...
Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), in particular, exposure therapy, is the treatment of first choic...
Contemporary cognitive theories argue that socially anxious individuals adopt self-protective behavi...
Avoidance has long been viewed as an etiological mechanism of anxiety disorders. Of more recent focu...
This study evaluates the hypothesis that safety-seeking behaviours play an important role in maintai...
Studies indicate that there is room for improvement in the effectiveness of existing cognitive behav...
The potentially detrimental effects of safety behaviors during exposure therapy are still subject to...
There is mounting evidence to suggest that people with anxiety disorders exhibit a risk-avoidant dec...
The aim of this qualitative study was to gain an in-depth understanding of experiences and reactions...
Research in the anxiety disorders has shown that safety behaviors function to maintain pathological ...
Available evidence suggests that both Anxiety Sensitivity (AS) and Experiential Avoidance (EA) are g...
Background Gangemi, Mancini, and van den Hout (2012) argued that anxious patients use safety behavio...
Avoidance is a hallmark symptom and a primary maintaining factor in anxiety disorders. Theories of a...
Safety behaviors are a strategy many individualswith anxiety disorders develop to reduce anxiety and...
Cognitive models suggest that social anxiety disorder (SAD) is maintained through the use of safety ...
Anxiety disorders are the most common mental health problem, affect individuals across the lifespan,...
Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), in particular, exposure therapy, is the treatment of first choic...
Contemporary cognitive theories argue that socially anxious individuals adopt self-protective behavi...
Avoidance has long been viewed as an etiological mechanism of anxiety disorders. Of more recent focu...
This study evaluates the hypothesis that safety-seeking behaviours play an important role in maintai...
Studies indicate that there is room for improvement in the effectiveness of existing cognitive behav...
The potentially detrimental effects of safety behaviors during exposure therapy are still subject to...
There is mounting evidence to suggest that people with anxiety disorders exhibit a risk-avoidant dec...
The aim of this qualitative study was to gain an in-depth understanding of experiences and reactions...
Research in the anxiety disorders has shown that safety behaviors function to maintain pathological ...
Available evidence suggests that both Anxiety Sensitivity (AS) and Experiential Avoidance (EA) are g...