Interactions between anxiety and impulsive dimensions are differentially associated with experiential avoidance DOI Creative Commons

Sonalee Joshi,

David A. Clark,

James L. Abelson

et al.

Journal of Mood and Anxiety Disorders, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 6, P. 100067 - 100067

Published: March 30, 2024

Anxiety and impulsivity often co-occur, but due to broad conceptualizations of impulsive behavior, it remains unclear whether anxiety could be positively associated with global or specific facets impulsivity. Negative urgency, rash behavior that specifically occurs during negative emotional states, may provide common ground examine the overlap between high Limited work has examined relationships urgency behavioral processes are both impulsivity, such as experiential avoidance. In this study, we self-report data collected from a non-clinical sample adult participants (n = 589) test avoidance through Contrary hypotheses, found alone did not alter relationship However, follow-up analyses including data-driven factors revealed in combination, emotion-based (i.e. positive urgency) hyperactivity were linked greater By contrast, non-planning lower These results targets for future studies individual differences profiles co-occurring

Language: Английский

Interactions between anxiety and impulsive dimensions are differentially associated with experiential avoidance DOI Creative Commons

Sonalee Joshi,

David A. Clark,

James L. Abelson

et al.

Journal of Mood and Anxiety Disorders, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 6, P. 100067 - 100067

Published: March 30, 2024

Anxiety and impulsivity often co-occur, but due to broad conceptualizations of impulsive behavior, it remains unclear whether anxiety could be positively associated with global or specific facets impulsivity. Negative urgency, rash behavior that specifically occurs during negative emotional states, may provide common ground examine the overlap between high Limited work has examined relationships urgency behavioral processes are both impulsivity, such as experiential avoidance. In this study, we self-report data collected from a non-clinical sample adult participants (n = 589) test avoidance through Contrary hypotheses, found alone did not alter relationship However, follow-up analyses including data-driven factors revealed in combination, emotion-based (i.e. positive urgency) hyperactivity were linked greater By contrast, non-planning lower These results targets for future studies individual differences profiles co-occurring

Language: Английский

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