keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38492456/anticipating-interpersonal-sensitivity-a-predictive-model-for-early-intervention-in-psychological-disorders-in-college-students
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Min Zhang, Kailei Yan, Yufeng Chen, Ruying Yu
Psychological disorders, notably social anxiety and depression, exert detrimental effects on university students, impeding academic achievement and overall development. Timely identification of interpersonal sensitivity becomes imperative to implement targeted support and interventions. This study selected 958 freshmen from higher education institutions in Zhejiang province as the research sample. Utilizing the runge-kutta search and elite levy spreading enhanced moth-flame optimization (MFO) in conjunction with the kernel extreme learning machine (KELM), we propose an efficient intelligent prediction model, namely bREMFO-KELM, for predicting the interpersonal sensitivity of college students...
March 7, 2024: Computers in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38492355/determinants-of-consumer-adoption-of-multilingual-self-service-ordering-systems-in-fast-food-restaurants
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Luming Wang, Yin Cui, Jie Sun, Jingyun Liu, Dewen Wei, Chao Gu
Due to the increasing number of international exchanges, foreign users have gradually become a significant consumer segment. Many of them are not proficient in the local language. Providing them with native language services will be an important trend, both from a business and a humanistic perspective. The purpose of this study is to investigate the fast-food restaurant ordering system that can provide multilingual services for foreigners, and to investigate factors that influence fast food restaurant consumers to adopt multilingual self-service ordering systems...
March 15, 2024: Acta Psychologica
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38489952/transitioning-to-college-testing-cognitive-bias-modification-for-interpretations-as-an-inoculation-tool-for-social-anxiety-in-college-first-years
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sarah E Dreyer-Oren, Akanksha Das, Rachel B Geyer, Robert E Fite, Elizabeth J Kiel, Elise M Clerkin
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Reducing social anxiety development among incoming college students may improve college adjustment and mental health outcomes. This study tested whether cognitive bias modification for interpretations (CBM-I) reduces social anxiety and increases adjustment during the transition to college, and whether changes in outcomes would be mediated by changes in interpretation biases. METHODS: Participants (N = 73) were randomly assigned to a 3-session weekly CBM-I condition or symptom tracking (ST) control condition...
March 11, 2024: Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38488260/examining-co-occurring-social-anxiety-in-cognitive-behavioral-therapy-for-eating-disorders-does-it-change-and-does-it-moderate-eating-disorder-outcomes
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pheobe L Ho, David M Erceg-Hurn, Peter M McEvoy, Bruce N C Campbell, Danielle C Mathersul, Helen M Correia, Bronwyn C Raykos
OBJECTIVE: Eating disorders (EDs) often co-occur with social anxiety disorder (SAD). However, little research has examined the influence of SAD symptoms on ED treatment outcomes in the context of individual outpatient cognitive-behavior therapy for eating disorders (CBT-ED). It is plausible that SAD symptom severity could improve as a result of ED treatment, given the high overlap between EDs and SAD. We sought to test whether baseline SAD symptoms moderate early response to CBT-ED or post-treatment outcomes in CBT-ED, and the degree to which SAD symptoms improve during therapy despite SAD not being an explicit treatment target...
March 15, 2024: International Journal of Eating Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38488015/exploring-the-association-between-social-camouflaging-and-self-versus-caregiver-report-discrepancies-in-anxiety-and-depressive-symptoms-in-autistic-and-non-autistic-socially-anxious-adolescents
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jiedi Lei, Eleanor Leigh, Tony Charman, Ailsa Russell, Matthew J Hollocks
Social camouflaging or masking refers to strategies autistic individuals adopt to hide their autism persona when trying to fit in. It is unclear whether camouflaging is only applicable to social differences unique to autism, or more generally to any types of social difference, such as experiences of mental health difficulties. We asked 43 autistic and 39 non-autistic adolescents (aged 14-19 years, all of whom showed similarly high levels of social anxiety) and their primary caregivers to complete questionnaires about their mental health (anxiety and depression) and autistic traits, and adolescents self-reported camouflaging behaviours...
March 15, 2024: Autism: the International Journal of Research and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38487653/peer-victimization-and-social-anxiety-in-adolescence-a-comparison-between-migrant-and-native-students-in-italy
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniele Di Tata, Dora Bianchi, Fiorenzo Laghi
The first aim of this study is to investigate the relationship between bullying victimization and social anxiety in native and migrant adolescents in Italy. Specifically, it was hypothesized that migrant adolescents (in comparison with natives) experience more frequent episodes of bullying victimization, which in turn, may be a risk factor for the development of social anxiety symptoms. The second aim of the study is to explore the relationships from reflected minority categorization to perceived ethnic discrimination at school and social anxiety symptoms, in the subgroup of migrant students...
2024: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38486333/social-learning-based-health-literacy-promotion-on-the-self-efficacy-and-social-anxiety-of-adolescents-with-type-1-diabetes
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jamalodin Begjani, Akram Sadat Sadat Hosseini, Hedieh Saneifard, Vida Rahimi Hasanabad
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Type 1 diabetes mellitus one of the biggest health concerns around the world, is difficult to manage during adolescence. Among the non-medical methods of controlling this disease is empowerment through self-efficacy. Poor self-efficacy leads to social anxiety and ultimately deficiencies in diabetes. There is also a correlation among health literacy, self-efficacy, and social anxiety. Thus, the present study aimed to evaluate the impact of a literacy promotion training program based on social learning theory on the self-efficacy and social anxiety of adolescents with T1DM...
March 15, 2024: Clinical Diabetes and Endocrinology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38485930/resting-state-amygdala-subregion-and-precuneus-connectivity-provide-evidence-for-a-dimensional-approach-to-studying-social-anxiety-disorder
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Simone Mizzi, Mangor Pedersen, Susan L Rossell, Peter Rendell, Gill Terrett, Markus Heinrichs, Izelle Labuschagne
Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is a prevalent and disabling mental health condition, characterized by excessive fear and anxiety in social situations. Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) paradigms have been increasingly used to understand the neurobiological underpinnings of SAD in the absence of threat-related stimuli. Previous studies have primarily focused on the role of the amygdala in SAD. However, the amygdala consists of functionally and structurally distinct subregions, and recent studies have highlighted the importance of investigating the role of these subregions independently...
March 14, 2024: Translational Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38483054/interactions-among-stress-behavioral-inhibition-and-delta-beta-coupling-predict-adolescent-anxiety-during-the-covid-19-pandemic
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michelle L Ramos, Anna M Zhou, Marisa N Lytle, Sarah Myruski, Koraly PĂ©rez-Edgar, Kristin A Buss
The COVID-19 pandemic brought about unprecedented changes and uncertainty to the daily lives of youth. The range of adjustment in light of a near-universal experience of COVID restrictions highlights the importance of identifying factors that may render some individuals more susceptible to heightened levels of anxiety during stressful life events than others. Two risk factors to consider are temperamental behavioral inhibition (BI) and difficulties in emotion regulation (ER)...
April 2024: Developmental Psychobiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38482377/theory-of-mind-impairment-in-childhood-narcolepsy-type-1-a-case-control-study
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marco Veneruso, Paola Del Sette, Ramona Cordani, Serena Lecce, Fabio Pizza, Lorenzo Chiarella, Cristina Venturino, Lino Nobili, Giuseppe Plazzi
Narcolepsy type 1 is a central disorder of hypersomnolence characterized by excessive daytime sleepiness, cataplexy and other rapid eye movement sleep-related manifestations. Neurophysiological studies suggest that narcolepsy type 1 patients may experience impairment in emotional processing due to structural and functional changes in limbic structures and associated areas. However, the only study exploring narcolepsy behavioural responses found no impairment in the ability to recognize emotions, possibly due to compensatory mechanisms...
2024: Brain communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38479247/fear-of-negative-evaluation-and-intolerance-of-uncertainty-assessing-potential-internalizing-correlates-of-eating-disorder-related-clinical-impairment-and-differences-across-diagnostic-presentations
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Angeline R Bottera, Elizabeth N Dougherty, Sophia Todorov, Jennifer E Wildes
The Hierarchical Taxonomy of Internalizing Dimensions for Eating Disorders model positions eating disorder (ED) symptoms on an internalizing dimension alongside anxiety and mood symptoms. Symptom dimensions falling under the internalizing subfactors of distress (e.g., social anxiety) and fear/avoidance (e.g., panic, compulsions, checking) may differentially guide treatment. We examined relations between fear of negative evaluation and intolerance of uncertainty (core features of social anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder, respectively) and ED-related impairment and potential diagnostic differences...
March 5, 2024: Eating Behaviors
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38478492/the-relationship-between-personality-throughout-adolescence-and-social-anxiety-disorder-in-young-adulthood-a-longitudinal-twin-study
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eirunn Skaug, Trine Waaktaar, Svenn Torgersen
This study examined the longitudinal relationship between a range of personality related variables measured throughout adolescence, and social anxiety disorder (SAD) in young adulthood. In addition, we examined to what degree the phenotypic associations between personality and SAD could be attributed to shared genetic and environmental factors, respectively. A total of 3394 twins (56% females), consisting of seven national birth cohorts from Norway, participated in the study. Personality was measured with self-report questionnaires at three times throughout adolescence, and SAD was measured with a diagnostic interview in early adulthood (M = 19...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38476047/social-anxiety-moderates-the-association-between-adolescent-irritability-and-bully-perpetration
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael T Perino, Jennifer C Harper-Lednicky, Alecia C Vogel, Chad M Sylvester, Deanna M Barch, Joan L Luby
BACKGROUND: Preliminary work suggests anxiety moderates the relationship between irritability and bullying. As anxiety increases, the link between irritability and perpetration decreases. We hypothesize that any moderation effect of anxiety is driven by social anxiety symptoms. We sought to explicate the moderating effect of anxiety, while clarifying relations to other aggressive behaviors. METHODS: A sample of adolescents ( n = 169, mean = 12.42 years of age) were assessed using clinician rated assessments of anxiety, parent reports of irritability and bullying behaviors (perpetration, generalized aggression, and victimization)...
March 13, 2024: Development and Psychopathology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38476042/sex-specific-distributed-white-matter-microarchitectural-alterations-in-preadolescent-youths-with-anxiety-disorders-a-mega-analytic-study
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nakul Aggarwal, Do P M Tromp, Jennifer U Blackford, Daniel S Pine, Patrick H Roseboom, Lisa E Williams, Ned H Kalin
OBJECTIVE: Anxiety disorders are among the most common psychiatric disorders in youths and emerge during childhood. This is also a period of rapid white matter (WM) development, which is critical for efficient neuronal communication. Previous work in preadolescent children with anxiety disorders demonstrated anxiety disorder-related reductions in WM microstructural integrity (fractional anisotropy [FA]) in the uncinate fasciculus (UF), the major WM tract facilitating prefrontal cortical-limbic structural connectivity...
March 13, 2024: American Journal of Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38468204/the-role-of-subjective-interpersonal-and-structural-social-isolation-in-12-month-and-lifetime-anxiety-disorders
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ann W Nguyen, Harry Owen Taylor, Robert Joseph Taylor, Alexis Z Ambroise, Tyrone Hamler, Weidi Qin, Linda M Chatters
BACKGROUND: Anxiety disorders are among the most prevalent psychiatric conditions worldwide, and the incidence of anxiety disorders among adults in the U.S. have increased over the last decade. Anxiety disorders can have debilitating effects on multiple areas of functioning and quality of life. Recently, social isolation has emerged as an important public health problem associated with worse health and well-being outcomes. Research on the connection between social isolation and mental health has found that multiple dimensions of social isolation may negatively impact mental health, but few inquiries have focused on the association between social isolation and anxiety...
March 11, 2024: BMC Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38467380/salivary-crp-predicts-treatment-response-to-virtual-reality-exposure-therapy-for-social-anxiety-disorder
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elizabeth E Antici, Kate R Kuhlman, Michael Treanor, Michelle G Craske
BACKGROUND: Social anxiety disorder (SAD) places a profound burden on public health and individual wellbeing. Systemic inflammation may be important to the onset and maintenance of SAD, and anti-inflammatory treatments have shown promise in relieving symptoms of SAD. In the present study, we conducted secondary analyses on data from a randomized clinical trial to determine whether C-reactive protein (CRP) concentrations and social anxiety symptoms decreased over the course of virtual reality exposure therapy, and whether changes in social anxiety symptoms as a function of treatment varied as a function of CRP...
March 9, 2024: Brain, Behavior, and Immunity
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38466343/emotion-regulation-as-a-mediator-in-the-relationship-between-childhood-maltreatment-and-symptoms-of-social-anxiety-among-college-students
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katharine E Musella, Maria C DiFonte, Rebecca Michel, Amy Stamates, Ellen Flannery-Schroeder
OBJECTIVE: The current study explored emotion regulation strategies (ie, suppression, cognitive reappraisal, experiential avoidance) as mediators in the relationship between childhood maltreatment and social anxiety. PARTICIPANTS: One hundred and ninety-three undergraduate students ( M age = 19.5 years; 83.9% female) were recruited from a public university in the northeastern United States. METHODS: Participants completed measures assessing childhood maltreatment, emotion regulation strategies, and social anxiety...
March 11, 2024: Journal of American College Health: J of ACH
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38464303/machine-learning-and-bayesian-network-analyses-identifies-psychiatric-disorders-and-symptom-associations-with-insomnia-in-a-national-sample-of-31-285-treatment-seeking-college-students
#38
Adam Calderon, Seung Yeon Baik, Matthew H S Ng, Ellen E Fitzsimmons-Craft, Daniel Eisenberg, Denise E Wilfley, C Barr Taylor, Michelle G Newman
Background: A better understanding of the structure of relations among insomnia and anxiety, mood, eating, and alcohol-use disorders is needed, given its prevalence among young adults. Supervised machine learning provides the ability to evaluate the discriminative accuracy of psychiatric disorders associated with insomnia. Combined with Bayesian network analysis, the directionality between symptoms and their associations may be illuminated. Methods: The current exploratory analyses utilized a national sample of college students across 26 U...
February 21, 2024: Research Square
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38461709/childhood-psychological-maltreatment-and-social-anxiety-in-college-students-the-roles-of-parasympathetic-nervous-system-activity-and-parent-child-separation-experience
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jingxin Zhao, Rui Sun, Mengqi Shangguan
BACKGROUND: Childhood psychological maltreatment is a risk factor for social anxiety in adulthood. Parent-child separation, as one of the most serious adversities in early life, may exacerbate the risk of psychological maltreatment and influence the interactions between childhood psychological maltreatment and biological sensitivity to stress in relation to social anxiety. However, there has been a dearth of work on this issue. OBJECTIVE: This study investigated the interactive effects between childhood psychological maltreatment and parasympathetic nervous system (PNS) activity on social anxiety in college students by comparing those who experienced parent-child separation versus those who did not...
March 9, 2024: Child Abuse & Neglect
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38460394/alterations-in-cortical-thickness-of-frontoparietal-regions-in-patients-with-social-anxiety-disorder
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dasom Lee, Ye-Ha Jung, Suhyun Kim, Yoonji Irene Lee, Jeonghun Ku, Uicheul Yoon, Soo-Hee Choi
Although functional changes of the frontal and (para)limbic area for emotional hyper-reactivity and emotional dysregulation are well documented in social anxiety disorder (SAD), prior studies on structural changes have shown mixed results. This study aimed to identify differences in cortical thickness between SAD and healthy controls (CON). Thirty-five patients with SAD and forty-two matched CON underwent structural magnetic resonance imaging. A vertex-based whole brain and regional analyses were conducted for between-group comparison...
February 27, 2024: Psychiatry Research. Neuroimaging
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