Rany Abend1, Leone de Voogd2, Elske Salemink2, Reinout W Wiers2, Koraly Pérez-Edgar3, Amanda Fitzgerald4, Lauren K White1,5, Giovanni A Salum6, Jie He7, Wendy K Silverman8, Jeremy W Pettit9, Daniel S Pine1, Yair Bar-Haim10. 1. Section on Development and Affective Neuroscience, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, MD, USA. 2. Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. 3. Department of Psychology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA. 4. School of Psychology, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland. 5. Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USA. 6. Departament of Psychiatry, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil. 7. Department of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China. 8. Yale Child Study Center, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA. 9. Department of Psychology, Florida International University, Miami, FL, USA. 10. School of Psychological Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Considerable research links threat-related attention biases to anxiety symptoms in adults, whereas extant findings on threat biases in youth are limited and mixed. Inconsistent findings may arise due to substantial methodological variability and limited sample sizes, emphasizing the need for systematic research on large samples. The aim of this report is to examine the association between threat bias and pediatric anxiety symptoms using standardized measures in a large, international, multi-site youth sample. METHODS: A total of 1,291 children and adolescents from seven research sites worldwide completed standardized attention bias assessment task (dot-probe task) and child anxiety symptoms measure (Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders). Using a dimensional approach to symptomatology, we conducted regression analyses predicting overall, and disorder-specific, anxiety symptoms severity, based on threat bias scores. RESULTS: Threat bias correlated positively with overall anxiety symptoms severity (ß = 0.078, P = .004). Furthermore, threat bias was positively associated specifically with social anxiety (ß = 0.072, P = .008) and school phobia (ß = 0.076, P = .006) symptoms severity, but not with panic, generalized anxiety, or separation anxiety symptoms. These associations were not moderated by age or gender. CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate associations between threat bias and pediatric anxiety symptoms, and suggest that vigilance to external threats manifests more prominently in symptoms of social anxiety and school phobia, regardless of age and gender. These findings point to the role of attention bias to threat in anxiety, with implications for translational clinical research. The significance of applying standardized methods in multi-site collaborations for overcoming challenges inherent to clinical research is discussed.
BACKGROUND: Considerable research links threat-related attention biases to anxiety symptoms in adults, whereas extant findings on threat biases in youth are limited and mixed. Inconsistent findings may arise due to substantial methodological variability and limited sample sizes, emphasizing the need for systematic research on large samples. The aim of this report is to examine the association between threat bias and pediatric anxiety symptoms using standardized measures in a large, international, multi-site youth sample. METHODS: A total of 1,291 children and adolescents from seven research sites worldwide completed standardized attention bias assessment task (dot-probe task) and childanxiety symptoms measure (Screen for ChildAnxiety Related Emotional Disorders). Using a dimensional approach to symptomatology, we conducted regression analyses predicting overall, and disorder-specific, anxiety symptoms severity, based on threat bias scores. RESULTS: Threat bias correlated positively with overall anxiety symptoms severity (ß = 0.078, P = .004). Furthermore, threat bias was positively associated specifically with social anxiety (ß = 0.072, P = .008) and school phobia (ß = 0.076, P = .006) symptoms severity, but not with panic, generalized anxiety, or separation anxiety symptoms. These associations were not moderated by age or gender. CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate associations between threat bias and pediatric anxiety symptoms, and suggest that vigilance to external threats manifests more prominently in symptoms of social anxiety and school phobia, regardless of age and gender. These findings point to the role of attention bias to threat in anxiety, with implications for translational clinical research. The significance of applying standardized methods in multi-site collaborations for overcoming challenges inherent to clinical research is discussed.
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