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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

The Divergent Effects of Anxiety on Political Participation: Anxiety Inhibits Participation Among the Socio-Economic and Racially Marginalized

Podob, Andrew W. January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
32

The relationship between co-rumination and different forms of normative anxiety in Quebec youth

Segall Cernik, Rebecca 08 1900 (has links)
Les amis peuvent compter l'un sur l'autre lorsqu'ils sont confrontés à des problèmes, mais certaines discussions peuvent conduire à la co-rumination. La co-rumination apparaît tôt dans la vie et a été associée à diverses formes de symptômes anxieux et/ou à des désordres cliniques d’anxiété. Toutefois, peu d’études ont exploré l'association entre la co-rumination et les formes d'anxiété normative incluant l'anxiété d'état, de trait, de performance et la sensibilité à l'anxiété. Ce mémoire examine la relation entre la co-rumination et ces formes d'anxiété normative en tenant compte du sexe et de l'âge. Au total, 1204 enfants (âgés de 11 à 12 ans) et adolescents (âgés de 16 à 17 ans) ont été recrutés dans des écoles primaires et secondaires du Québec. Ils ont rempli des questionnaires mesurant la co-rumination et les quatre formes d'anxiété normative dans leurs classes. Les résultats ont révélé que la co-rumination était associée à une seule forme d'anxiété normative (sensibilité à l'anxiété) chez les enfants et à trois formes (trait, performance et sensibilité à l'anxiété) chez les adolescents. Ainsi, la co-rumination semble associée différemment à certaines formes d'anxiété normative en raison de facteurs développementaux. De futures études confirmatoires et longitudinales devraient examiner les hypothèses générées par les résultats de cette étude exploratoire. Au-delà des implications discutées dans l'article, ce mémoire présente des pistes de recherche potentielles et des considérations pour de futures études portant sur la relation entre la co-rumination et les différentes formes d'anxiété normative. / Friends can rely on each other when faced with problems, though these discussions may lead to co-rumination. Co-rumination occurs early in life and has been associated with various forms of anxiety symptoms and/or clinical anxiety disorders. However, a scarcity of literature has explored the association between co-rumination and forms of normative anxiety, including state anxiety, trait anxiety, test anxiety, and anxiety sensitivity. This thesis examined the relationship between co-rumination and these forms of normative anxiety while considering sex and age. In total, 1204 children (ages 11 to 12) and adolescents (ages 16 to 17) were recruited from elementary and high schools in Quebec. Participants completed questionnaires measuring co-rumination and the four forms of normative anxiety in their classrooms. The results revealed that co-rumination was associated with one form of normative anxiety (anxiety sensitivity) in children and three forms (trait anxiety, test anxiety, and anxiety sensitivity) in adolescents. Thus, co-rumination may be differentially associated with various forms of normative anxiety due to certain developmental factors. Future longitudinal confirmatory studies should test the hypotheses generated from the findings of this exploratory study. Beyond the implications discussed in the article, this thesis features potential research avenues and considerations for future studies investigating the relationship between co-rumination and different forms of normative anxiety.
33

Fear of burglary in the Honeydew police district

Watt, Hermine 11 1900 (has links)
The research project investigated whether victims of housebreaking experienced motivational, cognitive and emotional deficits central to the Learned Helplessness phenomenon. In keeping with the Reformulated Learned Helplessness theory the attributional style of victims, were also assessed. The State-Trait Inventory developed by Spielberger, Gorsuch, Lushene, Vagg and Jacobs was administered to measure the anxiety levels of victims. Sub-goals served as illustration for the learned helplessness phenomenon. Three- hundred victims, using probability sampling techniques, were interviewed by means of an interview schedule. Support was found for cognitive and some motivational deficits and a common range of emotions experienced by victims. The majority of victims exhibited a global attnbutional style. Burglary victims did not show appreciably higher trait and state scores means, except for females in the 19-39 age group, when compared to a psychological norm. Environmental factors did play a role in rendering homes vulnerable. Recommendations addressing the fear of housebreaking were made at a therapeutic and practical level. / Sociology / M.A. (Criminology)
34

The effects of anxiety on visual attention for emotive stimuli in primary school children

Kelly, Lauren January 2014 (has links)
Anxiety can be advantageous in terms of survival and well-being, yet atypically high levels may be maladaptive and result in the clinical diagnosis of an anxiety disorder. Several risk factors have been implicated in the manifestation of clinical anxiety, including cognitive biases. In recent years, a plethora of research has emerged demonstrating that anxious adults exhibit biases of attention for threatening stimuli, especially that which is biologically relevant (e.g., facial expressions). Specific components of attentional bias have also been identified, namely facilitated engagement, impaired disengagement, and avoidance. However, the majority of studies have focused on the spatial domain of attention. Furthermore, the area is under-researched in children, despite research demonstrating that symptoms relating to clinical and non-clinical anxiety follow a stable course from childhood through to adolescence and adulthood. Consequently, the aim of this thesis was to investigate how anxiety affects children’s visual attention for emotive, particularly angry, faces. In order to provide a more comprehensive understanding, the current research involved examining the role of temporal and spatial attention utilising rapid serial visual presentation with the attentional blink, and the visual probe paradigm, respectively. The main hypothesis was that high state and/or trait anxiety would be associated with an attentional bias for angry, relative to positive or neutral faces in both the temporal and spatial domains. In relation to the temporal domain, key findings demonstrated that high levels of trait anxiety were associated with facilitated engagement towards both angry and neutral faces. It was further found that all children rapidly disengaged attention away from angry faces. Findings related to the processing of angry faces accorded with the main hypothesis stated in this thesis, as well as research and theory in the area. The finding that anxious children preferentially processed neutral faces in an attentional blink investigation was unexpected. This was argued to potentially reflect this stimulus type being interpreted as threatening. Key findings regarding the spatial domain were that high trait anxious children displayed an early covert bias of attention away from happy faces and a later, overt bias of attention away from angry faces. The finding that high trait anxiety was linked to an attentional bias away from happy faces in a visual probe task was also unexpected. This was argued to potentially reflect smiling faces being interpreted as signifying social dominance, thus resulting in the viewer experiencing feelings of subordination and becoming avoidant and/or submissive. To conclude, this thesis has enhanced current knowledge of attentional bias in both the temporal and spatial domains for emotive stimuli in anxious children. It has demonstrated that higher levels of trait anxiety moderate children’s allocation of attentional resources to different stimulus types, whether these are threatening, positive, or neutral. This has important implications for evaluating past research in adults and children, and for further developing theoretical models of attentional bias and anxiety. It also offers important clinical implications, since attending towards or away from specific stimuli may affect the development and maintenance of anxiety disorders. Recently, a treatment that aims to modify attentional bias in anxious individuals has begun to be developed. In light of the present findings, it may be necessary to review this treatment so that anxious children are re-trained in the specific biases of attention demonstrated here.
35

Fear of burglary in the Honeydew police district

Watt, Hermine 11 1900 (has links)
The research project investigated whether victims of housebreaking experienced motivational, cognitive and emotional deficits central to the Learned Helplessness phenomenon. In keeping with the Reformulated Learned Helplessness theory the attributional style of victims, were also assessed. The State-Trait Inventory developed by Spielberger, Gorsuch, Lushene, Vagg and Jacobs was administered to measure the anxiety levels of victims. Sub-goals served as illustration for the learned helplessness phenomenon. Three- hundred victims, using probability sampling techniques, were interviewed by means of an interview schedule. Support was found for cognitive and some motivational deficits and a common range of emotions experienced by victims. The majority of victims exhibited a global attnbutional style. Burglary victims did not show appreciably higher trait and state scores means, except for females in the 19-39 age group, when compared to a psychological norm. Environmental factors did play a role in rendering homes vulnerable. Recommendations addressing the fear of housebreaking were made at a therapeutic and practical level. / Sociology / M.A. (Criminology)
36

State and trait predictors of negatively toned dreams in women : a prospective investigation

Banu, Cristina 09 1900 (has links)
Bien que les rêves dysphoriques, comme les mauvais rêves et les cauchemars, surviennent du moins occasionnellement chez la majorité des adultes, les facteurs impliqués dans l’occurrence de ces rêves, d’une nuit à l’autre, demeurent incertains. Par le biais d’un devis prospectif multiniveaux, nous avons étudié l’impact interactif des facteurs d’état et de trait sur l’occurrence de rêves dysphoriques d’une nuit à l’autre. Nous avons également exploré dans quelle mesure le contenu affectif et négatif des rêves de tous les jours était affecté par les mêmes facteurs. Des femmes adultes ont complété des mesures de trait de personnalité et de psychopathologie suivies de jusqu’à quatre semaines de journaux quotidiens de rêves et d’anxiété avant le coucher, ainsi que d’inventaires hebdomadaires de stress perçu. En contrôlant pour le rappel de rêve, une hausse hebdomadaire du stress perçu a significativement augmenté la probabilité d’avoir un rêve dysphorique une nuit donnée, alors que la psychopathologie a modéré positivement cette relation. Ces résultats suggèrent que les femmes adultes ayant un niveau plus élevé de psychopathologie seraient particulièrement sensibles au stress quotidien et donc plus susceptibles de faire des mauvais rêves ou cauchemars les nuits suivantes. Les analyses ont aussi révélé des effets positifs différentiels des variables d’état et de trait sur le contenu émotionnel et négatif des rêves de tous les jours. Ces résultats concordent avec le modèle neurocognitif des rêves dysphoriques proposé récemment et l’hypothèse de continuité des rêves. Les implications de cette étude et des recommandations futures sont émises. / Although disturbing dreams, such as bad dreams and nightmares, are experienced at least occasionally by a majority of adults, the factors involved in the night-by-night occurrence of these dreams remain unclear. Using a prospective design and multilevel modeling, we investigated the interactive impact of state and trait factors on the nightly occurrence of disturbing dreams. We further explored the extent to which emotionally intense and negative everyday dream content was affected by the same variables. Adult women completed measures of personality and psychopathology followed by up to four weeks of daily dream logs, daily pre-sleep anxiety logs, and weekly perceived stress inventories. After controlling for dream recall, upsurges in weekly perceived stress significantly increased the likelihood of having a disturbing dream on a given night, whereas psychopathology positively moderated that relationship. These results suggest that adult women reporting higher levels of psychopathology are particularly sensitive to everyday stress and thus more likely to experience bad dreams or nightmares on subsequent nights. Analyses also revealed differential positive effects of state and trait variables on the emotional and negative content of everyday dreams. These findings are in line with a recently proposed neurocognitive model of disturbed dreaming and the continuity hypothesis of dreaming. The implications of this study and future recommendations are emitted.

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