The Role of Self-reports and Behavioral Measures of Interpretation Biases in Children with Varying Levels of Anxiety

Open Access
Authors
  • R.M. Rapee
  • J.L. Hudson
  • S.M. Bögels
  • E.S. Becker
  • M. Rinck
Publication date 12-2018
Journal Child Psychiatry and Human Development
Volume | Issue number 49 | 6
Pages (from-to) 897-905
Number of pages 9
Organisations
  • Other - Research of the Student Medical Service
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Research Institute of Child Development and Education (RICDE)
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG)
Abstract

We investigated the role of self-reports and behavioral measures of interpretation biases and their content-specificity in children with varying levels of spider fear and/or social anxiety. In total, 141 selected children from a community sample completed an interpretation bias task with scenarios that were related to either spider threat or social threat. Specific interpretation biases were found; only spider-related interpretation bias and self-reported spider fear predicted unique variance in avoidance behavior on the Behavior Avoidance Task for spiders. Likewise, only social-threat related interpretation bias and self-reported social anxiety predicted anxiety during the Social Speech Task. These findings support the hypothesis that fearful children display cognitive biases that are specific to particular fear-relevant stimuli. Clinically, this insight might be used to improve treatments for anxious children by targeting content-specific interpretation biases related to individual disorders.

Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1007/s10578-018-0804-x
Downloads
10.1007_s10578-018-0804-x (Final published version)
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