Abstract

The current study examined whether children varying in their levels of social anxiety, separation anxiety and spider fear exhibit a negative interpretation bias specific for their fears. Furthermore, age and gender were assessed as moderators of this relation. Children (N = 603) of the age of 7–12 years were asked to solve ambiguous scenarios reflecting social threat, separation threat or spider threat. Children’s levels of anxiety were assessed with self-report questionnaires. Results indicated that children scoring higher on self-reported social anxiety, separation anxiety or spider fear, displayed a negative interpretation bias for the threat-scenarios pertaining to their specific anxiety or fear, even after controlling for comorbidity with other anxiety subtypes. Contrary to our hypotheses, we did not find moderating effects of age or gender. These results indicate that even in a community sample, content-specificity of negative interpretation biases is present.

Highlights

  • The role of biased cognitive processing in the onset and maintenance of anxiety has been emphasized in many cognitive models [1,2,3,4]

  • We found that children with higher scores on social anxiety, separation anxiety or spider fear displayed a negative interpretation bias only for the threat-scenarios pertaining to their specific anxiety or fear, even after controlling for comorbidity with other anxiety subtypes

  • Neither age nor gender moderated the relation between the specific threat scores and the types of anxieties

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Summary

Introduction

The role of biased cognitive processing in the onset and maintenance of anxiety has been emphasized in many cognitive models [1,2,3,4]. These biased cognitive processes are theorized to be the result of overactive schemas that are organised around the theme of threat. One of the biased cognitive processes that has a central role in cognitive behavioural models of anxiety is a negative interpretation bias [1, 4] This bias is the tendency to interpret ambiguous situations as negative and/or threatening. A recent meta-analysis looked into the relation between anxiety and negative

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