All Relations between Anxiety Disorders and positive emotion

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Todd B Kashdan, Justin W Weeks, Antonina A Savostyanov. Whether, how, and when social anxiety shapes positive experiences and events: a self-regulatory framework and treatment implications. Clinical psychology review. vol 31. issue 5. 2011-09-12. PMID:21529701. although neglected in diagnostic criteria lists, theoretical models, and treatment approaches, attenuated positive emotions and cognitions distinguish social anxiety and social anxiety disorder from other anxiety conditions (and cannot be accounted for by comorbidity with depression). 2011-09-12 2023-08-12 human
Phillip J Tully, Susanne S Pedersen, Helen R Winefield, Robert A Baker, Deborah A Turnbull, Johan Denolle. Cardiac morbidity risk and depression and anxiety: a disorder, symptom and trait analysis among cardiac surgery patients. Psychology, health & medicine. vol 16. issue 3. 2011-08-29. PMID:21491341. the aim of this study was to examine depression and anxiety disorders and their characteristic symptoms (anhedonia/low positive affect and anxious arousal, respectively), along with measures of state negative affect (na) and type d personality, in relation to cardiac surgery related morbidity. 2011-08-29 2023-08-12 Not clear
David A Moscovitch, Michael K Suvak, Stefan G Hofman. Emotional response patterns during social threat in individuals with generalized social anxiety disorder and non-anxious controls. Journal of anxiety disorders. vol 24. issue 7. 2010-11-30. PMID:20708493. patterns of synchrony in repeated measures of heart rate, skin conductance levels, negative affect, and positive affect were investigated in patients with social anxiety disorder and non-anxious controls during a speech task. 2010-11-30 2023-08-12 Not clear
Lori R Eisner, Sheri L Johnson, Charles S Carve. Positive affect regulation in anxiety disorders. Journal of anxiety disorders. vol 23. issue 5. 2009-08-14. PMID:19278820. positive affect regulation in anxiety disorders. 2009-08-14 2023-08-12 Not clear
Lori R Eisner, Sheri L Johnson, Charles S Carve. Positive affect regulation in anxiety disorders. Journal of anxiety disorders. vol 23. issue 5. 2009-08-14. PMID:19278820. although individual differences exist in how people respond to positive affect (pa), little research addresses pa regulation in people with anxiety disorders. 2009-08-14 2023-08-12 Not clear
Jennifer L Hudson, Jonathan S Comer, Philip C Kendal. Parental responses to positive and negative emotions in anxious and nonanxious children. Journal of clinical child and adolescent psychology : the official journal for the Society of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, American Psychological Association, Division 53. vol 37. issue 2. 2008-08-07. PMID:18470768. a significant interaction was evident between maternal anxiety disorder and emotion, whereby anxious mothers were more intrusive in situations involving anxiety and anger (compared to positive emotion situations), whereas nonanxious mothers were more intrusive only during situations involving anger. 2008-08-07 2023-08-12 Not clear
Cynthia Suveg, Janice Zeman, Ellen Flannery-Schroeder, Michael Cassan. Emotion socialization in families of children with an anxiety disorder. Journal of abnormal child psychology. vol 33. issue 2. 2005-07-18. PMID:15839493. results indicated that mothers of children with an anxiety disorder spoke less frequently than their child, used significantly fewer positive emotion words, and discouraged their children's emotion discussions more than did mothers of nonclinical children. 2005-07-18 2023-08-12 Not clear
David A Morilak, Alan Fraze. Antidepressants and brain monoaminergic systems: a dimensional approach to understanding their behavioural effects in depression and anxiety disorders. The international journal of neuropsychopharmacology. vol 7. issue 2. 2004-08-31. PMID:15003145. negative or positive affect) that are affected in depression and anxiety disorders, and that are ameliorated by drug treatment. 2004-08-31 2023-08-12 Not clear
R C Shelton, A J Tomarke. Can recovery from depression be achieved? Psychiatric services (Washington, D.C.). vol 52. issue 11. 2001-12-14. PMID:11684742. the authors present a therapeutic heuristic that derives, in part, from a body of research that suggests that symptoms of mood disorders can be separated into three distinct components: somatic anxiety, which is most prominent in anxiety disorders, such as panic; anhedonia or low positive affect, which is most specific to depression; and general distress, which is present with both anxiety and depressive disorders. 2001-12-14 2023-08-12 Not clear