Literature DB >> 28120251

Shyness Trajectories across the First Four Decades Predict Mental Health Outcomes.

Alva Tang1, Ryan J Van Lieshout2, Ayelet Lahat3, Eric Duku2, Michael H Boyle2, Saroj Saigal4, Louis A Schmidt3.   

Abstract

Although childhood shyness is presumed to predict mental health problems in adulthood, no prospective studies have examined these outcomes beyond emerging adulthood. As well, existing studies have been limited by retrospective and cross-sectional designs and/or have examined shyness as a dichotomous construct. The present prospective longitudinal study (N = 160; 55 males, 105 females) examined shyness trajectories from childhood to the fourth decade of life and mental health outcomes. Shyness was assessed using parent- and self-rated measures from childhood to adulthood, once every decade at ages 8, 12-16, 22-26, and 30-35. At age 30-35, participants completed a structured psychiatric interview and an experimental task examining attentional biases to facial emotions. We found 3 trajectories of shyness, including a low-stable trajectory (59.4%), an increasing shy trajectory from adolescence to adulthood (23.1%), and a decreasing shy trajectory from childhood to adulthood (17.5%). Relative to the low-stable trajectory, the increasing, but not the decreasing, trajectory was at higher risk for clinical social anxiety, mood, and substance-use disorders and was hypervigilant to angry faces. We found that the development of emotional problems in adulthood among the increasing shy trajectory might be explained in part by adverse peer and social influences during adolescence. Our findings suggest different pathways for early and later developing shyness and that not all shy children grow up to have psychiatric and emotional problems, nor do they all continue to be shy.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Attention bias; Mental health; Shyness; Social anxiety; Trajectories

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28120251     DOI: 10.1007/s10802-017-0265-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol        ISSN: 0091-0627


  53 in total

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8.  Changing dynamics in problematic personality: a multiwave longitudinal study of the relationship between shyness and aggressiveness from childhood to early adulthood.

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Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  2004-02

10.  Early risk factors and developmental pathways to chronic high inhibition and social anxiety disorder in adolescence.

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  14 in total

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Authors:  Louis A Schmidt; Alva Tang; Kimberly L Day; Ayelet Lahat; Michael H Boyle; Saroj Saigal; Ryan J Van Lieshout
Journal:  Child Psychiatry Hum Dev       Date:  2017-08

3.  Frontal Brain Asymmetry and the Trajectory of Shyness Across the Early School Years.

Authors:  Kristie L Poole; Diane L Santesso; Ryan J Van Lieshout; Louis A Schmidt
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2019-07

4.  Developmental Trajectories of Shyness-Sensitivity from Middle Childhood to Early Adolescence in China: Contributions of Peer Preference and Mutual Friendship.

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Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2019-07

5.  Infant behavioral inhibition predicts personality and social outcomes three decades later.

Authors:  Alva Tang; Haley Crawford; Santiago Morales; Kathryn A Degnan; Daniel S Pine; Nathan A Fox
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6.  Multiple Trajectories in Anxious Solitary Youths: the Middle School Transition as a Turning Point in Development.

Authors:  Heidi Gazelle; Richard A Faldowski
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2019-07

7.  Quality over quantity: A transactional model of social withdrawal and friendship development in late adolescence.

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8.  Physical activity from adolescence to young adulthood: patterns of change, and their associations with activity domains and sedentary time.

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9.  Social Withdrawal and Romantic Relationships: A Longitudinal Study in Early Adulthood.

Authors:  Stefania A Barzeva; Jennifer S Richards; Wim H J Meeus; Albertine J Oldehinkel
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10.  Temperamental Shyness and Anger/Frustration in Childhood: Normative Development, Individual Differences, and the Impacts of Maternal Intrusiveness and Frontal Electroencephalogram Asymmetry.

Authors:  Ran Liu; Jennifer J Phillips; Feng Ji; Dexin Shi; Martha Ann Bell
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2021-07-01
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