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Social Anxiety in Childhood: Bridging Developmental and Clinical Perspectives: New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, Number 127

Social Anxiety in Childhood: Bridging Developmental and Clinical Perspectives: New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, Number 127

Kenneth H. Rubin
0/5 ( ratings)
Social anxiety in childhood is the focus of research in three psychological research traditions: developmental studies emphasizing dispositional constructs such as behavioral inhibition and its biological substrates; development investigations emphasizing affective-behavioral characteristics and their parent-child and peer-relational precursors and moderators; and clinical investigations of social anxiety disorder emphasizing a variety of etiological factors, diagnosis, and treatment. In this volume, we review and identify gaps in extant evidence that permit researchers from the three traditions to translate their core definitional constructs in ways that would facilitate the use of one another's research. Topics include:

Conceptual relations between anxiety disorder and fearful temperament Factors contributing to the emergence of anxiety among behaviorally inhibited children: the role of attention Familial and temperamental risk factors for social anxiety disorder Anxious solitude, withdrawal and anxiety disorders; conceptualization, co-occurrence, and peer processes parents, peers and social withdrawal in childhood Intimately connected to this translation of constructs is a discussion of the conceptualization of core states and their manifestations across childhood, as well as corresponding methodologies. Extant research is analyzed from an integrative, overarching framework of developmental psychopathology in which children's adjustment is conceptualized as multiply determined such that children who share certain risks may display diverse adjustment over time and children with diverse risks may develop shared adaptational difficulties over time . Finally, key themes for future integrative research are identified and implications for preventative and early intervention in childhood social anxiety are discussed.

This is the 127th volume of the Jossey-Bass quarterly report series
New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development
. The mission of
New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development
is to provide scientific and scholarly presentations on cutting edge issues and concepts in the field of child and adolescent development. Each volume focuses on a specific "new direction" or research topic, and is edited by an expert or experts on that topic.
Pages
100
Format
Paperback
Release
March 22, 2010
ISBN 13
9780470618059

Social Anxiety in Childhood: Bridging Developmental and Clinical Perspectives: New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, Number 127

Kenneth H. Rubin
0/5 ( ratings)
Social anxiety in childhood is the focus of research in three psychological research traditions: developmental studies emphasizing dispositional constructs such as behavioral inhibition and its biological substrates; development investigations emphasizing affective-behavioral characteristics and their parent-child and peer-relational precursors and moderators; and clinical investigations of social anxiety disorder emphasizing a variety of etiological factors, diagnosis, and treatment. In this volume, we review and identify gaps in extant evidence that permit researchers from the three traditions to translate their core definitional constructs in ways that would facilitate the use of one another's research. Topics include:

Conceptual relations between anxiety disorder and fearful temperament Factors contributing to the emergence of anxiety among behaviorally inhibited children: the role of attention Familial and temperamental risk factors for social anxiety disorder Anxious solitude, withdrawal and anxiety disorders; conceptualization, co-occurrence, and peer processes parents, peers and social withdrawal in childhood Intimately connected to this translation of constructs is a discussion of the conceptualization of core states and their manifestations across childhood, as well as corresponding methodologies. Extant research is analyzed from an integrative, overarching framework of developmental psychopathology in which children's adjustment is conceptualized as multiply determined such that children who share certain risks may display diverse adjustment over time and children with diverse risks may develop shared adaptational difficulties over time . Finally, key themes for future integrative research are identified and implications for preventative and early intervention in childhood social anxiety are discussed.

This is the 127th volume of the Jossey-Bass quarterly report series
New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development
. The mission of
New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development
is to provide scientific and scholarly presentations on cutting edge issues and concepts in the field of child and adolescent development. Each volume focuses on a specific "new direction" or research topic, and is edited by an expert or experts on that topic.
Pages
100
Format
Paperback
Release
March 22, 2010
ISBN 13
9780470618059

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