| Literature DB >> 22528030 |
Leonie J Vreeke1, Peter Muris.
Abstract
This study examined the relations between behavioral inhibition, Big Five personality traits, and anxiety disorder symptoms in non-clinical children (n = 147) and clinically anxious children (n = 45) aged 6-13 years. Parents completed the Behavioral Inhibition Questionnaire-Short Form, the Big Five Questionnaire for Children, and the Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders-Revised. Results indicated that, compared to parents of non-clinical children, parents of clinically anxious children rated their offspring higher on neuroticism and behavioral inhibition, but lower on extraversion, conscientiousness, and intellect/openness. Further, extraversion emerged as the strongest correlate of an inhibited temperament, and this appeared true for the clinically anxious as well as the non-clinical children. Finally, in both the clinical and non-clinical samples, higher levels of behavioral inhibition and neuroticism were unique and significant predictors of anxiety disorders symptoms.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22528030 PMCID: PMC3472051 DOI: 10.1007/s10578-012-0302-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Psychiatry Hum Dev ISSN: 0009-398X
Means (standard deviations) and Cronbach’s alphas for various questionnaires, as completed by parents of non-clinical and clinically anxious children
| Non-clinical children ( | Clinically anxious children ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| α |
| α | |
| BIQ | 32.83 (11.61)a | .92 | 49.29 (14.16)b | .90 |
| BFQ-C extraversion | 36.37 (5.54)a | .79 | 30.56 (5.38)b | .75 |
| BFQ-C agreeableness | 37.31 (5.57)a | .87 | 36.30 (4.81)a | .81 |
| BFQ-C conscientiousness | 33.51 (6.27)a | .88 | 30.60 (6.34)b | .83 |
| BFQ-C Neuroticism | 20.95 (6.06)a | .86 | 23.74 (6.48)b | .87 |
| BFQ-C intellect/openness | 36.96 (6.76)a | .86 | 31.39 (5.72)b | .77 |
| SCARED-R | 20.50 (13.68)a | .92 | 37.89 (15.57)b | .91 |
BIQ Behavioral Inhibition Questionnaire, BFQ-C Big Five Questionnaire for Children, SCARED-R Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders-Revised. Means with different subscripts differ at p < .05
Partial correlations (corrected for sex) between parent-rated questionnaires measuring behavioral inhibition, Big Five personality traits, and anxiety disorder symptoms, computed for non-clinical children (n = 147, below the diagonal), and clinically anxious children (n = 45, above the diagonal) separately
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | BIQ total score | – | −.58** | −.40* | .03 | .01 | −.08 | .52** |
| 2. | BFQ-C extraversion | −.50** | − | .45* | .27 | .05 | .43* | −.25 |
| 3. | BFQ-C agreeableness | −.16* | .49** | – | .59** | −.22 | .29 | −.21 |
| 4. | BFQ-C conscientiousness | .12 | .30** | .55** | – | −.11 | .47** | −.16 |
| 5. | BFQ-C neuroticism | .04 | .02 | −.35** | −.27** | – | −.17 | .23 |
| 6. | BFQ-C intellect/openness | −.02 | .41** | .40** | .61** | −.19 | – | −.07 |
| 7. | SCARED-R total score | .47** | −.24* | −.17 | −.05 | .39** | −.13 | – |
BIQ Behavioral Inhibition Questionnaire, BFQ-C Big Five Questionnaire for Children, SCARED-R Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders-Revised
* p < .05
** p < .05/21
Main results of the regression analyses predicting BIQ behavioral inhibition from Big Five personality traits
| B | SE | β | Δ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Step 1 | .00 | |||
| Sex | -.88 | 1.72 | -.04 | |
| Step 2 | .35** | |||
| BFQ-C extraversion | −1.31 | .18 | −.63** | |
| BFQ-C agreeableness | .01 | .20 | .01 | |
| BFQ-C conscientiousness | .57 | .18 | .31* | |
| BFQ-C neuroticism | .30 | .15 | .16* | |
| BFQ-C intellect/openness | .13 | .16 | .08 | |
|
| ||||
| Step 1 | .00 | |||
| Sex | .70 | 4.24 | .02 | |
| Step 2 | .48** | |||
| BFQ-C extraversion | −1.42 | .39 | −.54** | |
| BFQ-C agreeableness | −1.18 | .50 | −.42* | |
| BFQ-C conscientiousness | .81 | .37 | .36* | |
| BFQ-C neuroticism | .00 | .29 | .01 | |
| BFQ-C intellect/openness | .25 | .38 | .10 | |
BIQ Behavioral Inhibition Questionnaire, BFQ-C Big Five Questionnaire for Children
* p < .05
** p < .01
Main results of the regression analyses predicting children’s DSM-defined anxiety disorder symptoms (SCARED-R) from behavioral inhibition and Big Five personality traits
| B | SE | β | Δ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Step 1 | .01 | |||
| Sex | 2.28 | 2.02 | .08 | |
| Step 2 | .24** | |||
| BFQ-C extraversion | −.09 | .25 | −.04 | |
| BFQ-C agreeableness | .17 | .23 | .07 | |
| BFQ-C conscientiousness | .06 | .22 | .03 | |
| BFQ-C neuroticism | .88 | .18 | .39** | |
| BFQ-C intellect/openness | −.15 | .22 | −.07 | |
| Step 3 | .12** | |||
| BIQ behavioral inhibition | .52 | .10 | .44** | |
|
| ||||
| Step 1 | .08* | |||
| Sex | −2.98 | 4.87 | −.10 | |
| Step 2 | .13 | |||
| BFQ-C extraversion | .18 | .52 | .06 | |
| BFQ-C agreeableness | .88 | .61 | .29 | |
| BFQ-C conscientiousness | −.91 | .45 | −.37* | |
| BFQ-C neuroticism | .62 | .34 | .26* | |
| BFQ-C intellect/openness | .26 | .44 | .09 | |
| Step 3 | .24** | |||
| BIQ behavioral inhibition | .72 | .19 | .66** | |
BIQ Behavioral Inhibition Questionnaire, BFQ-C Big Five Questionnaire for Children, SCARED-R Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders-Revised
* p < .10
** p < .001