All Relations between Anxiety Disorders and negative emotion

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Agnes van Minnen, Lori A Zoellner, Melanie S Harned, Katherine Mill. Changes in comorbid conditions after prolonged exposure for PTSD: a literature review. Current psychiatry reports. vol 17. issue 3. 2016-02-04. PMID:25736701. we reviewed findings from 18 randomized controlled trials of pe that assessed the most common comorbid conditions (major depression, anxiety disorders, substance use disorders, personality disorders, and psychotic disorders) and additional symptomatic features (suicidality, dissociation, negative cognitions, negative emotions, and general health and work/social functioning). 2016-02-04 2023-08-13 Not clear
Andreas Frick, Fredrik Åhs, Jonas Engman, My Jonasson, Iman Alaie, Johannes Björkstrand, Örjan Frans, Vanda Faria, Clas Linnman, Lieuwe Appel, Kurt Wahlstedt, Mark Lubberink, Mats Fredrikson, Tomas Furmar. Serotonin Synthesis and Reuptake in Social Anxiety Disorder: A Positron Emission Tomography Study. JAMA psychiatry. vol 72. issue 8. 2015-10-30. PMID:26083190. serotonin is involved in negative affect, but whether anxiety syndromes, such as social anxiety disorder (sad), are characterized by an overactive or underactive serotonin system has not been established. 2015-10-30 2023-08-13 Not clear
Philippe R Goldin, Michal Ziv, Hooria Jazaieri, Justin Weeks, Richard G Heimberg, James J Gros. Impact of cognitive-behavioral therapy for social anxiety disorder on the neural bases of emotional reactivity to and regulation of social evaluation. Behaviour research and therapy. vol 62. 2015-10-15. PMID:25193002. we examined whether cognitive-behavioral therapy (cbt) for social anxiety disorder (sad) would modify self-reported negative emotion and functional magnetic resonance imaging brain responses when reacting to and reappraising social evaluation, and tested whether changes would predict treatment outcome in 59 patients with sad who completed cbt or waitlist groups. 2015-10-15 2023-08-13 Not clear
Sandra J Llera, Michelle G Newma. Rethinking the role of worry in generalized anxiety disorder: evidence supporting a model of emotional contrast avoidance. Behavior therapy. vol 45. issue 3. 2015-07-28. PMID:24680226. the contrast avoidance model (newman & llera, 2011) proposes that individuals with generalized anxiety disorder (gad) are hypersensitive to sharp upward shifts in negative emotion that typically accompany negative events, and use worry to maintain sustained intrapersonal negativity in an attempt to avoid these shifts. 2015-07-28 2023-08-12 human
Katherine E Hurrell, Jennifer L Hudson, Carolyn A Schnierin. Parental reactions to children's negative emotions: relationships with emotion regulation in children with an anxiety disorder. Journal of anxiety disorders. vol 29. 2015-07-27. PMID:25527899. parental reactions to children's negative emotions: relationships with emotion regulation in children with an anxiety disorder. 2015-07-27 2023-08-13 Not clear
Katherine E Hurrell, Jennifer L Hudson, Carolyn A Schnierin. Parental reactions to children's negative emotions: relationships with emotion regulation in children with an anxiety disorder. Journal of anxiety disorders. vol 29. 2015-07-27. PMID:25527899. results indicated that children diagnosed with an anxiety disorder had significantly greater difficulty regulating a range of negative emotions and were regarded as more emotionally negative and labile by their parents. 2015-07-27 2023-08-13 Not clear
Hudson W de Carvalho, Sérgio B Andreoli, Diogo R Lara, Christopher J Patrick, Maria I Quintana, Rodrigo A Bressan, Marcelo F Mello, Jair J Mari, Miguel R Jorg. The joint structure of major depression, anxiety disorders, and trait negative affect. Revista brasileira de psiquiatria (Sao Paulo, Brazil : 1999). vol 36. issue 4. 2015-03-02. PMID:25310205. the joint structure of major depression, anxiety disorders, and trait negative affect. 2015-03-02 2023-08-13 Not clear
Hudson W de Carvalho, Sérgio B Andreoli, Diogo R Lara, Christopher J Patrick, Maria I Quintana, Rodrigo A Bressan, Marcelo F Mello, Jair J Mari, Miguel R Jorg. The joint structure of major depression, anxiety disorders, and trait negative affect. Revista brasileira de psiquiatria (Sao Paulo, Brazil : 1999). vol 36. issue 4. 2015-03-02. PMID:25310205. this study examined the joint structure of dsm-iv-based major depression and anxiety disorders along with trait negative affect in a representative sample of adult individuals residing in the cities of são paulo and rio de janeiro, brazil. 2015-03-02 2023-08-13 Not clear
Arnaud Carré, Fabien Gierski, Cédric Lemogne, Eric Tran, Delphine Raucher-Chéné, Céline Béra-Potelle, Christophe Portefaix, Arthur Kaladjian, Laurent Pierot, Chrystel Besche-Richard, Frédéric Limosi. Linear association between social anxiety symptoms and neural activations to angry faces: from subclinical to clinical levels. Social cognitive and affective neuroscience. vol 9. issue 6. 2015-01-16. PMID:23651705. social anxiety disorder (sad), which is characterized by the fear of being rejected and negatively evaluated, involves altered brain activation during the processing of negative emotions in a social context. 2015-01-16 2023-08-12 human
Todd B Kashdan, Antonina S Farme. Differentiating emotions across contexts: comparing adults with and without social anxiety disorder using random, social interaction, and daily experience sampling. Emotion (Washington, D.C.). vol 14. issue 3. 2014-12-11. PMID:24512246. given the interpersonal difficulties linked to social anxiety disorder (sad), deficient negative emotion differentiation may contribute to impairment in this population. 2014-12-11 2023-08-12 human
Neville W Hennessey, Esther Dourado, Janet M Beilb. Anxiety and speaking in people who stutter: an investigation using the emotional Stroop task. Journal of fluency disorders. vol 40. 2014-12-01. PMID:24929466. people with anxiety disorders show an attentional bias towards threat or negative emotion words. 2014-12-01 2023-08-13 human
David A Moscovitch, Karen Rowa, Jeffrey R Paulitzki, Maria D Ierullo, Brenda Chiang, Martin M Antony, Randi E McCab. Self-portrayal concerns and their relation to safety behaviors and negative affect in social anxiety disorder. Behaviour research and therapy. vol 51. issue 8. 2014-09-07. PMID:23778055. self-portrayal concerns and their relation to safety behaviors and negative affect in social anxiety disorder. 2014-09-07 2023-08-12 human
David C Steffens, Douglas R McQuoid, Moria J Smoski, Guy G Potte. Clinical outcomes of older depressed patients with and without comorbid neuroticism. International psychogeriatrics. vol 25. issue 12. 2014-07-25. PMID:23941723. neuroticism is a psychological construct that includes tendency to exhibit negative affect (na), having poor stress tolerance and being at risk for depression and anxiety disorders. 2014-07-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
Heide Klumpp, David Post, Mike Angstadt, Daniel A Fitzgerald, K Luan Pha. Anterior cingulate cortex and insula response during indirect and direct processing of emotional faces in generalized social anxiety disorder. Biology of mood & anxiety disorders. vol 3. 2014-05-20. PMID:23547713. generalized social anxiety disorder (gsad) is associated with a heightened neural sensitivity to signals that convey threat, as evidenced by exaggerated amygdala and/or insula activation when processing face stimuli that express negative emotions. 2014-05-20 2023-08-12 human
Todd B Kashdan, Antonina S Farmer, Leah M Adams, Patty Ferssizidis, Patrick E McKnight, John B Nezle. Distinguishing healthy adults from people with social anxiety disorder: evidence for the value of experiential avoidance and positive emotions in everyday social interactions. Journal of abnormal psychology. vol 122. issue 3. 2014-04-09. PMID:23815396. our results suggest that negative emotions alone do not fully distinguish normal from pathological social anxiety, and that assessing social anxiety disorder should include impairments in positive emotional experiences and dysfunctional emotion regulation (in the form of experiential avoidance) in social situations. 2014-04-09 2023-08-12 human
Leah D Doane, Susan Mineka, Richard E Zinbarg, Michelle Craske, James W Griffith, Emma K Ada. Are flatter diurnal cortisol rhythms associated with major depression and anxiety disorders in late adolescence? The role of life stress and daily negative emotion. Development and psychopathology. vol 25. issue 3. 2014-03-06. PMID:23880381. negative emotion, specifically sadness and loneliness, was associated with flatter slopes and partially accounted for the associations between comorbid mdd and anxiety disorders and cortisol. 2014-03-06 2023-08-12 Not clear
Cathy Creswell, Adela Apetroaia, Lynne Murray, Peter Coope. Cognitive, affective, and behavioral characteristics of mothers with anxiety disorders in the context of child anxiety disorder. Journal of abnormal psychology. vol 122. issue 1. 2013-11-18. PMID:22905861. these findings suggest that maternal anxiety disorder is associated with reduced tolerance of children's negative emotions. 2013-11-18 2023-08-12 Not clear
Yuri Terasawa, Midori Shibata, Yoshiya Moriguchi, Satoshi Umed. Anterior insular cortex mediates bodily sensibility and social anxiety. Social cognitive and affective neuroscience. vol 8. issue 3. 2013-09-10. PMID:22977199. this indicates that greater attention to one's bodily state may contribute to the development of intense negative emotions and anxiety disorders. 2013-09-10 2023-08-12 human
Bridgette L Tonnsen, Patrick S Malone, Deborah D Hatton, Jane E Robert. Early negative affect predicts anxiety, not autism, in preschool boys with fragile X syndrome. Journal of abnormal child psychology. vol 41. issue 2. 2013-07-01. PMID:23011214. characterizing the relationship between early negative affect and anxiety within fxs may inform etiology and treatment considerations specific to children with fxs, as well as lend insight into precursors of anxiety disorders in other clinical groups and community samples. 2013-07-01 2023-08-12 Not clear
Jennifer S Stevens, Stephan Haman. Sex differences in brain activation to emotional stimuli: a meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies. Neuropsychologia. vol 50. issue 7. 2012-10-19. PMID:22450197. the greater left amygdala response to negative emotion for women accords with previous reports that women respond more strongly to negative emotional stimuli, as well as with hypothesized links between increased neurobiological reactivity to negative emotion and increased prevalence of depression and anxiety disorders in women. 2012-10-19 2023-08-12 Not clear