121 |
Etude de la relation entre la pratique sportive, l'anxiété physique sociale, le genre et les attitudes et comportements alimentaires problématiques des adolescents. / Study of the Relationship between Sport, Social Physique Anxiety, Gender and Disturbed Eating Attitudes and Behaviors of AdolescentsLanfranchi, Marie-Christine 27 June 2014 (has links)
Etude de la Relation entre la Pratique Sportive, l'Anxiété Physique Sociale, le Genre et les Attitudes et ComCette thèse examine l'effet modérateur (1) de l'âge, et du genre sur la relation entre la pratique sportive (minceur, individuel, libre, compétitif), et les attitudes et comportements alimentaires problématiques (six dimensions) des adolescents. (2) de l'IMC, des caractéristiques du sport, sur la relation entre l'Anxiété Physique Sociale (SAP) et les ACAP selon la théorie de la Présentation de Soi, (Leary & Kolawski, 1990). Les adolescents ayant (SAP) soumis à la pression de leur environnement, sont enclins à contrôler leur physique, peuvent être protégés des ACAP, mais peuvent aussi s'engager dans des pratiques liées aux ACAP qui peuvent mettre en danger leur santé.Population : 770 et 766 adolescents français 11-18 ans; 46 sports classés en sports de minceur et non minceur. Méthode : analyse statistique, régression 4 étapes ; Résultats : Les sports (minceur, compétition, individuels) reliés à un SAP élevé présentent des risques élevés d'ACAP en particulier chez les filles. Les garçons sont plus protégés des ACAP. Les sports individuels (vomissement-purge peur de grossir, préoccupation alimentaire, culpabilité à l'égard de manger). Les actions de prévention peuvent prévenir les ACAP. / This thesis examines the moderating effect (1) age, and gender on the relationship between sport (leanness, individual, free, competitive), and disturbed eating attitudes and behaviors ( six dimensions) adolescents. (2) BMI, characteristics of sport, on the relationship between Social Anxiety Physics (SAP ) and ACAP according to the theory of the Presentation of Self ( Leary & Kolawski , 1990). Adolescents with (SAP ) under the pressure of their environment, likely to control their physical , can be protected from ACAP , but may also engage in practices related to ACAP may damage to their health.Population: 770 and 766 teenagers 11-18 years old French ; 46 classified sports leaness and not leaness. Method: statistical analysis, regression 4 steps ;Results: sports (leanness, competition, individual), age, gender connected to a high SAP high risk ACAP especially among girls. Boys are more protected from ACAP expect in leanness. Individual sports (vomiting, purging fear of gaining weight, food preoccupation, guilt about eating. Preventive actions can prevent ACAP.
|
122 |
Prediktorer för sömnproblem hos ungdomar – en longitudinell studie / Predictors of Sleep Problems in Adolescents – A Longitudinal StudyDahlin, Emma, Westin, Sofi January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
|
123 |
Cognitive behavioural therapies for social anxiety disorder (SAnD) reviewMcKenna, Ian January 2013 (has links)
Background: Social anxiety disorder (SAnD) is a highly prevalent condition, characterised by an intense fear of social or performance situations where individuals worry about being negatively evaluated by others. An up to date systematic review of the effectiveness of cognitive behavioural therapies for SAnD is required to guide practice. Objectives: To assess the efficacy and acceptability of cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) compared with treatment as usual/waiting list (TAU/WL) for individuals with SAnD. Search methods: We searched the Cochrane Depression, Anxiety and Neurosis Group (CCDAN) Controlled Trials Register and conducted supplementary searches of MEDLINE, PsycInfo, EMBASE, and international trial registers (ICTRP; ClinicalTrials.gov) in October 2011 and CINAHL in October 2012. We also searched reference lists of retrieved articles, and contacted trial authors for information on ongoing/completed trials. Selection criteria: Randomised and quasi-randomised controlled trials undertaken in out-patient settings, involving adults aged 18-75 years with a primary diagnosis of SAnD, assigned either to CBT or TAU/WL. Data collection and analysis Data on patients, interventions and outcomes were extracted by two review authors independently, and the Risk of bias in each study was assessed. The primary outcomes were social anxiety reduction (based on relative risk (RR) of clinical response and mean difference in symptom reduction), and treatment acceptability (based on RR of attrition). Results: Thirteen studies (715 participants) were included in the review, of which 11 studies (599 participants) contributed data to meta-analyses. Based on four studies, CBT was more effective than TAU/WL in achieving clinical response at post-treatment (RR 3.60, 95% CI 1.35 to 9.57), and on eleven studies (599 participants) it was more effective than TAU/WL in reducing symptoms of social anxiety. No significant difference was found between CBT and TAU/WL for attrition. No significant difference was demonstrated for social anxiety at follow-up and no studies examined follow-up data for clinical response or attrition. Authors' conclusions: The available evidence suggests that cognitive behavioural therapy might be effective in reducing anxiety symptoms for the short-term treatment of SAnD. However, the body of evidence comparing CBT with TAU/WL is small and heterogeneous.
|
124 |
The relationship between computer gaming hours and depression or social phobia in adults. An international online survey.Tobias, Radeke January 2016 (has links)
Background: In the past decades, there was a worldwide increase in people playing video games. Researchers have started to conduct studies and identified positive and negative associations with video gaming. Comparable studies have been done. Aim: The aim is to analyse, if there is an association between the average hours an adult participant has played computer games per day and depression or social phobia. Methods: Data from 4,936 adults who voluntarily participated in an online survey which was posted in the forum ‘www.reddit.com’ has been analysed. The survey included two verified Scales (CES-D and SPIN). Multiple linear regression was applied to test for significance respectively for each sex and after adjusting for other variables. Results: More than 56% of the participants were above the suggested cut-off scores of the CES-D Scale and more than 44% of the SPIN Scale. Positive associations were found between ‘Computer Gaming Hours’ and the outcomes ‘Depression’ and ‘Social Phobia’ in the total population. After stratifying for gender, no associations were found in all groups in the variable ‘Gender’ towards the outcome ‘Depression’. However, a positive association was found towards the outcome ‘Social Phobia’ for ‘males’ and ‘females’. Conclusions: The findings are not generalizable. Researcher need to investigate the differences between the results of this study compared to other studies, as well as the high prevalence of depression and social phobia among the participants. Additionally, more studies need to investigate, if having a depression or social phobia can lead to increased video gaming hours.
|
125 |
Social ångest och emotionsreglering hos ungdomar: Könsskillnader i prevalens samt i predicerande och modererande effekter av oro, ruminering och undantryckande över tid / Social anxiety and emotion regulation among adolescents: Gender differences in prevalence and in predictive and moderating effects of worry, rumination and suppression over timeEkberg, Johan, Rosén, Carl January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
|
126 |
Attentional biases in social anxiety: an investigation using the inattentional blindness paradigmLee, Han-Joo 05 November 2009 (has links)
Social anxiety disorder is the third most common mental disorder with the lifetime prevalence rate of 13.3% in the US population. Typically, it causes significant impairment in a wide range of functioning and follows a chronic, unremitting course if untreated. Over the past two decades, there has been a dramatic increase in clinical research aimed at examining underlying mechanisms maintaining social anxiety. One line of research has investigated attentional biases in social anxiety, using various cognitive experiment paradigms, including the emotional Stroop and the modified dotprobe tasks. However, overall findings are equivocal about the nature of attentional biases in social anxiety and several methodological problems limit the interpretability of the data. The present study examined attentional biases associated with social anxiety using a new research paradigm in the field of anxiety disorders: the inattentional blindness paradigm. This paradigm presents a social cue in the absence of the subjects’ expectation while they are engaged in a cognitively demanding task, thereby enabling the more purely attentional aspect of information processing to be examined reducing the influence of potential response biases or effortful strategies. Two independent experiments were conducted using nonclinical student samples consisting of individuals high in social anxiety (HSAs) versus individuals low in social anxiety (LSAs) based on the static and sustained inattentional blindness tasks. Overall, results revealed that HSAs were more likely to detect or identify a socially-threatening cue, relative to LSAs; whereas LSAs were more likely to detect or identify a non-threatening social cue, relative to HSAs. These findings were observed only in the presence of a bogus-speech manipulation. These data suggest the promising utility of the inattentional blindness paradigm in investigating attentional biases in social anxiety and perhaps other psychopathological conditions. Theoretical and clinical implications are discussed. / text
|
127 |
An Analogue Study of Loving-Kindness Meditation as a Buffer against Social StressLaw, Wing Man Rita January 2011 (has links)
Loving-kindness meditation (LKM) has the potential to improve intrapersonal and interpersonal functioning. This unique quality of LKM makes it a desirable candidate for buffering the stress of being social evaluated or socially excluded. Using the Trier Social Stress Test and the Cyberball social exclusion paradigm, the present study investigated the effectiveness of a brief LKM session in buffering against social evaluative and social exclusion stress. Three specific questions were addressed: In what domains can LKM exert positive effects? For whom does it work? And, how does it work? One hundred and thirteen participants (N = 113, 49 men) were randomly assigned to either a 10-minute LKM session or a 10-minute visualization control session. Findings showed that even just 10 minutes of LKM had an immediate relaxing effect as evidenced by increased respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), an index of parasympathetic cardiac control, and decreased respiration rate. In addition, the brief LKM intervention led to greater implicit positivity towards the self relative to the control intervention (p = .052). The brief LKM intervention also protected against some of the negative physiological and psychological effects of social stress. The majority of these effects are moderated by trait social anxiety and pre-meditation mood states (or pre-meditation mood state alone). Contrary to expectation, trait social anxiety alone did not moderate any of the LKM effects. Importantly, receiving a brief session of LKM while not being in a positive mood or being in a negative mood led to iatrogenic physiological and psychological effects. Providing an explanation for one of LKM's effects, findings showed that change in RSA during LKM fully mediated the LKM Intervention x Positive Affect interaction effect on change in post-social-stress RSA. In conclusion, findings of the present study have extended our understanding of LKM and have specific implications for future research and practice.
|
128 |
Transdiagnostiska faktorer vid samsjuklig kronisk smärtproblematik och social ångest : - en tvärsnittsstudie / Transdiagnostic factors in a comorbid sample of chronic pain and social anxiety : - a cross-sectional studyDe Santi, Cristobal, Rondin, Frida January 2013 (has links)
Denna tvärsnittsstudie syftade till att undersöka samförekomst av smärtrelaterad rädsla och social ångest i ett kliniskt sample med kronisk smärtproblematik. Syftet var också att beskriva och kontrastera samvariation av transdiagnostiska faktorer i eventuella subgrupper. Datan bestod av enkätsvar från 196 deltagare i Social ångest smärta-projektet som leds av Örebro universitet och Akademiska sjukhuset i Uppsala. En klusteranalys fick fram fyra subgrupper bland deltagarna. En subgrupp utmärkte sig för hög komorbiditet. Denna grupp visade höga nivåer av tänkbara transdiagnostiska faktorer som ångestkänslighet och negativ affekt, samt hög smärtkatastrofiering. Det diskuterades kring dessa faktorers roll som sårbarhets- och vidmakthållandeprocesser, utifrån aktuella teoretiska modeller. Studiens kliniska implikationer belyser behovet av hänsyn till dessa faktorers roll vid behandling och framtida forskning. / This cross-sectional study aimed to explore co-occurrence of pain-related fear and social anxiety in a clinical sample with chronic pain. The purpose was also to describe and contrast co-variation of transdiagnostic factors in potential subgroups. The data consisted of 196 answered questionnaires from the Social anxiety pain-project led by Örebro University and the Uppsala University Hospital. A cluster analysis produced four subgroups among the participants. One subgroup was salient for its high comorbidity. This group showed high levels of potential transdiagnostic factors such as anxiety sensitivity and negative affect, as well as high pain catastrophizing. These factors are discussed in terms of their role as vulnerability and maintaining factors, in the light of current theoretical models. The clinical implications of this study suggest taking the role of these factors into account in aspects of treatment and future research.
|
129 |
Becoming goth : geographies of an (un)popular cultureEnstone, Zoe O. January 2011 (has links)
Within this thesis I explore what can be achieved when culture is critically assessed through a series of theories that mobilise a spatial imaginary. I place the concepts of atmosphere, connection, site and encounter, and theories of emergence via terms such as movement, practice and embodiment, into tension with a single case study: Goth. Goth is a music based grouping, emerging from Punk, New Romantic, Indie and Glam Rock style and music cultures in the late 1970s, with a significant near-global presence in the popular culture industries and links to several salient media controversies; including the Columbine High School massacre, the murder of Sophie Lancaster, and fears over self-harm and suicide. I specifically draw on the vocabularies from within non-representational geographies of performance, relational materiality, affect and social anxiety to re-work understandings of this collectivity. I question what is involved in the material practices of Goth, explore how the practice and experience of Goth is articulated through specific sites, examine how Goth participates in the production and circulation of cultures of anxiety or (un)popularity; and reconsider the concept of ‘subculture’. To do so, I employ a range of methodologies, from guided walks to photo-diaries, within multi-site field research throughout the UK, Tokyo and New York City. I conclude that Goth and culture more generally can be theorised in a number of ways: it emerges as a performed series of embodied acts; it is co-produced in complex relations with non-humans; it can be thought of as a series of modulating affective atmospheres; it coalesces as a collectivity and circulates through events; and it is co-produced through sites and media events. None of these dominates over or diminishes the other; rather they are co-constitutive and interdependent.
|
130 |
Ung, trött och emotionellt dysreglerad – Kan sömn och emotionsregleringsstrategier vara riskfaktorer för utvecklandet av social ångest? / Young, tired and emotionally dysregulated - Can sleep and emotion regulation strategies be risk factors for the development of social anxiety?Gustafsson, Johanna, Lönnqvist Kankaanpää, Camilla January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
|
Page generated in 0.0343 seconds