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Journal Article

Citation

Klein AM, Van Niekerk RE, Allart Van Dam E, Rinck M, Verbraak MJPM, Hutschemaekers GJM, Becker ES. J. Behav. Ther. Exp. Psychiatry 2024; 84: e101953.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jbtep.2024.101953

PMID

38593495

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Children of parents with an anxiety disorder are at elevated risk for developing an anxiety disorder themselves. According to cognitive theories, a possible risk factor is the development of schema-related associations. This study is the first to investigate whether children of anxious parents display fear-related associations and whether these associations relate to parental anxiety.

METHODS: 44 children of parents with panic disorder, 27 children of parents with social anxiety disorder, and 84 children of parents without an anxiety disorder filled out the SCARED-71, and the children performed an Affective Priming Task.

RESULTS: We found partial evidence for disorder-specificity: When the primes were related to their parent's disorder and the targets were negative, the children of parents with panic disorder and children of parents with social anxiety disorder showed the lowest error rates related to their parents' disorder, but they did not have faster responses. We did not find any evidence for the expected specificity in the relationship between the parents' or the children's self-reported anxiety and the children's fear-related associations, as measured with the APT. LIMITATIONS: Reliability of the Affective Priming Task was moderate, and power was low for finding small interaction effects.

CONCLUSIONS: Whereas clearly more research is needed, our results suggest that negative associations may qualify as a possible vulnerability factor for children of parents with an anxiety disorder.


Language: en

Keywords

Children; Affective priming task; Anxiety disorders; Fear-related associations; Parental anxiety

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