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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

A Longitudinal Examination of Family Factors in Childhood Anxiety: The Role of Parental Anxiety and Child Emotion Dysregulation

Krizova, Katarina 01 October 2020 (has links)
Theoretical models specify that anxiety aggregates in families. Research confirmed maternal anxiety as a predictor of childhood anxiety; however, very little evidence exists in support of paternal anxiety's role in child anxiety as well as about potentially reciprocal relationships between parental and child anxiety. The parent-child anxiety transmission mechanisms are also not fully understood; the majority of previous research focuses on the child's acquisition of anxiety symptoms from a parent via cognitive processes. Recent integrative theoretical models propose that child emotion regulation processes might be involved in parent-child anxiety transmission. The current dissertation aimed to address these gaps in literature. Both studies utilized data from over 800 mothers, 400 fathers, and their children drawn from the longitudinal NICHD Study of Early Childcare and Youth Development. Measures of maternal anxiety, paternal anxiety, child anxiety, and child emotion dysregulation were collected over a nine-year period when children were between the ages of 6 and 15 years. Study I provided evidence of significant indirect effects from parental anxiety to child anxiety through child emotion dysregulation for both mother-child and the father-child relationships. Child emotion dysregulation was non-significant in the father-child path of a family model, despite significant direct effects. The results provide evidence for child emotion dysregulation as an underlying process of parent-child anxiety transmission. Study II provided evidence of significant bidirectional predictive links of maternal anxiety and child anxiety across ages 6, 8, 10, and 15 years tested in a mother-child cross-lagged path model. Significant predictive paths from paternal anxiety to child anxiety were found from ages 6 to 8 and a significant predictive path from child anxiety to paternal anxiety was found from age 10 to age 15 in a father-child cross-lagged model. Additional tests of family models confirmed that there were unique effects of both maternal and paternal anxiety on child anxiety over time. The results show the long-term impact of both maternal anxiety and paternal anxiety on child anxiety as well as child anxiety's reciprocal effects on parental anxiety. Both studies demonstrate the importance of both mothers and fathers in childhood anxiety etiology. / Doctor of Philosophy / Research has shown that anxiety might run in families, and that parental and child anxieties might reinforce each other. In research, most attention is paid to mothers and how their anxiety influences child anxiety, including how children learn their anxious experiencing from their mothers. Very little research has been dedicated to studying fathers and how their anxiety might impact their children. The current two studies of this dissertation wanted to better understand how maternal and paternal anxiety shape child anxiety over the years. Study I tested whether the way how children regulate their emotions is influenced by parental anxiety and whether it contributes to their own anxiety. The evidence shows both mother and father anxiety influence children's regulation of their emotions, and in turn, this contributes to child anxiety. Therefore, how children control their emotions impacts how parental anxiety shapes child anxiety. Study II tested whether parental anxiety influences child anxiety consistently over time as children become adolescents. Study II also tested whether child anxiety contributes to parental anxiety over the years. Results showed that maternal and child anxiety consistently foretold each other when children were at 8, 10, and 15 years old. The results for fathers were more complicated and showed that father anxiety likely influences child anxiety when children are younger, while child anxiety influences paternal anxiety when children are older, during their teenage years. Both studies highlighted showed the importance of both mother and father anxiety to better understand child anxiety.
32

Characterizing Associations Between Trauma and Substance Use and Related Problems Among Samples with Differing Clinical Presentation & Severity / TRAUMA AND SUBSTANCE USE AMONG DIFFERING SAMPLES

Patel, Herry January 2022 (has links)
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and substance use disorder (SUD) frequently co-occur. Comorbid PTSD+SUD confers heightened risk of other mental health concerns, suicidality, mortality, and functional impairment. Current treatments for comorbid PTSD+SUD show inconsistent results, highlighting the need for a more comprehensive understanding of the associations between PTSD and SUD symptoms. The current dissertation aimed to characterize the associations between PTSD and SUD using structural equation modelling among three different samples with differing clinical severity and presentation: (1) concurrent disorders sample with a high prevalence of PTSD; (2) an in-patient sample seeking treatment for PTSD; and (3) a subclinical sample of healthcare workers and public safety personnel. Data were extracted from multiple clinical databases across different studies to evaluate the associations between PTSD symptoms and alcohol/cannabis/substance use-related problems. Furthermore, the role of underlying mechanisms such as dissociation and emotion dysregulation, which are associated with both PTSD and SUD, were analyzed. All analyses used a structural equation modelling framework to represent the complex clinical presentation of comorbid PTSD+SUD analytically. A relatively consistent pattern of results was observed across the three samples. Global PTSD symptoms were significantly associated with cannabis-related problems, alcohol-related problems, and other illicit substance-related problems. Among PTSD symptoms, the reactivity symptom cluster (characterized by symptoms of hypervigilance, irritability, reckless behaviour, problems with concentration and sleep disturbances) was significantly associated with alcohol/cannabis/substance-related v problems across among the three samples. Furthermore, underlying mechanisms such as dissociation and emotion dysregulation significantly mediated the relations between PTSD symptoms and alcohol/cannabis/substance-related problems. Overall, the current results contribute to the limited literature examining the associations between PTSD and SUD symptoms. Lastly, the current results have important clinical implications for identifying efficacious treatment targets for comorbid PTSD+SUD. / Dissertation / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / Psychological distress following a traumatic event, known as traumatic stress, is often associated with problematic alcohol and/or substance use. The co-occurrence of these two confers a heightened risk of other mental health problems. As such, studying how these phenomena are associated with one another and what about each thing is more important to the association is important to understand. The purpose was to examine the connection between these phenomena among three different groups of people: two treatment-seeking groups and non-treatment seeking group one group. Traumatic stress was associated with problematic substance use in all three groups. In addition, other factors like mentally escaping from your body and having difficulties with regulating your emotions explained how traumatic stress and problematic substance use were connected to each other. These findings can help clinicians hone their treatment programs to better help individuals struggling with traumatic stress and problematic substance use.
33

Child Maltreatment Experiences and Romantic Relationship Functioning: The Role of Emotion Dysregulation and Early Maladaptive Schemas

Gaffey, Kathryn J. 20 November 2009 (has links)
No description available.
34

Barriers to Sexual Assertiveness in College Women: A Focus on Fear of Sexual Powerlessness and Emotion Dysregulation

Zerubavel, Noga 03 May 2010 (has links)
No description available.
35

The Impact of Emotion Dysregulation on the Relationships among Anxiety Sensitivity, Coping Drinking Motives, and Alcohol-Related Outcomes in College Women

Chandley, Rachel Burgard 16 August 2011 (has links)
No description available.
36

COPING VIA SUBSTANCE USE AND THE DEPRESSOGENIC INTERPLAY OF INTERNAL ATTRIBUTION BIAS: A THREE-WEEK DAILY DIARY STUDY

Heggeness, Luke Franklin 17 April 2018 (has links)
No description available.
37

Interpersonal Skills Group – Corrections Modified for Detained Juvenile Offenders withExternalizing Disorders: A Controlled Pilot Clinical Trial

Bunford, Nora 19 September 2016 (has links)
No description available.
38

Do Emotion Dysregulation and Internalized Shame Mediate the Relationship Between Borderline Personality Disorder Symptomology and Criminal Involvement?

Smith, Madison 01 May 2024 (has links) (PDF)
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a severe and debilitating mental disorder that is over-represented within the criminal legal system (CLS), with 15-29.5% of individuals in the CLS meeting criteria. However, little research has examined mechanisms leading to criminal involvement within this population. Potential mechanisms include positive/negative emotion dysregulation and internalized shame, which (aside from positive emotion dysregulation) have been linked to criminal involvement in other populations. Research has yet to examine these constructs as mechanisms explaining criminal involvement among individuals with BPD. This study examined positive/negative emotion dysregulation and internalized shame as mechanisms of the relationship between BPD and criminal involvement. Adults (N = 93) currently incarcerated in jail who are identified as having a current or prior mental health concern were invited to participate in the study. Measures include the addiction severity index (ASI) examining criminal involvement, the original and positive versions of the difficulties in emotion regulation scale (DERS; DERS-P), and the internalized shame scale (ISS). At the bivariate level, BPD symptoms were significantly correlated with negative emotion dysregulation (total score) and several subscales (clarity, goals, impulse, strategies), as well as internalized shame and criminal involvement. Negative emotion dysregulation and internalized shame were unrelated to criminal involvement, and there was no evidence of mediation through these constructs. These bivariate results are consistent with other literature, but future research is needed to examine relevant variables that could explicate the relationship between BPD symptoms and criminal involvement.
39

THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PHYSIOLOGICAL REACTIVITY TO PROVOCATION AND EMOTION DYSREGULATION WITH PROACTIVE AND AFFECTIVE AGGRESSION

puhalla, Alexander, 0000-0003-1570-9533 January 2020 (has links)
Biological theory proposes that autonomic nervous system (ANS) hypo-reactivity may be more specific to proactive aggression, while ANS hyper-reactivity may be specific to affective aggression. However, the literature finds mixed support, which may be because no study to date has concurrently examined emotion dysregulation, a highly related variable, as a potential moderator. The present study examined these relationships in 76 undergraduate participants (29 men, mean age = 21.49) who identified as Caucasian (51%), African-American (23%), Asian (21%), or Other (5%). Participants completed questionnaires, a resting state task, and a provocation task. Results found that blunted overall ANS reactivity was associated with proactive aggression. Emotion dysregulation moderated the relationship between parasympathetic nervous system (PNS) and sympathetic nervous system (SNS) reactivity with both proactive (at a trending level for SNS reactivity) and affective aggression. Specifically, among those slightly above average and high on emotion dysregulation, PNS augmentation and blunted SNS reactivity were associated with proactive and affective aggression, respectively. In contrast, among those low on emotion dysregulation, PNS augmentation was associated with decreased affective aggression. Thus, among those elevated on emotion dysregulation, it may be beneficial to teach counter-regulatory strategies to reduce the impact of ANS hypo-reactivity on aggression (across function). / Psychology
40

Co-occurring Oppositional Defiant and Depressive Symptoms: Emotion Dysregulation as an Underlying Process and Developmental Patterns across Middle Childhood

Lanza, Haydee Isabella January 2010 (has links)
Although there has been a recent surge in research examining comorbidity between externalizing and internalizing disorders in childhood, relatively less work has examined relations between specific externalizing conditions (i.e., oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) symptoms) and their co-occurrence with specific internalizing conditions (i.e., depressive symptoms). Furthermore, little empirical work has evaluated potential underlying processes, such as emotion dysregulation, which may explain relations between co-occurring ODD and depressive symptoms. There is also a paucity of research examining developmental patterns of co-occurring ODD and depressive symptoms. In the present study, I used latent class and latent transition analyses to (a) identify groups of children based on ODD and depressive symptom levels, (b) determine whether emotion dysregulation predicted co-occurring ODD and depressive symptoms, and (c) examine developmental patterns of change and continuity in groups across middle childhood within a community-based sample. Children were characterized by three latent classes based on ODD and depressive symptom severity: a group with very low levels of ODD or depressive symptoms, an ODD-only group with low levels of symptoms, and a co-occurring ODD and depressive symptom group with moderate levels of ODD and low levels of depressive symptoms. Furthermore, emotion dysregulation predicted to the class with moderate levels of ODD and low levels of depressive symptoms, although prediction from emotion dysregulation to class membership depended on the methodology used to index emotion dysregulation. Results of the LTA analyses suggested that symptom severity was relatively stable across middle childhood, with little evidence of changes in developmental patterns of ODD and depressive symptoms. Overall, the results of this study provide an important foundation for more sophisticated empirical inquiry regarding co-occurring ODD and depressive symptoms in childhood and potential processes that may explain their onset and development. / Psychology

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