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. 2005 Dec;34(4):712-23.
doi: 10.1207/s15374424jccp3404_13.

Physiological response and childhood anxiety: association with symptoms of anxiety disorders and cognitive bias

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Physiological response and childhood anxiety: association with symptoms of anxiety disorders and cognitive bias

Carl F Weems et al. J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol. 2005 Dec.

Abstract

This study examined the physiological response (skin conductance and heart rate [HR]) of youth exposed to a mildly phobic stimulus (video of a large dog) and its relation to child- and parent-reported anxiety symptoms and cognitive bias in a community-recruited sample of youth (n = 49). The results of this study indicated that HR and skin-conductance response were associated with youth report but not parent report of their child's symptoms of anxiety disorders and that HR response was more strongly associated with anxiety symptoms than skin-conductance response. Physiological response was uniquely associated with youth-reported symptoms of anxiety rather than youth-reported depression. Finally, HR response interacted with cognitive bias in predicting childhood anxiety disorder symptoms in a manner consistent with theories of the etiology of anxiety disorders.

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