Data di Pubblicazione:
2012
Abstract:
Background and objectives: Cognitive models of anxiety disorders view safety-seeking behaviors (i.e.,
avoidance, washing, etc.) as playing a crucial role in the maintenance of irrational fear. An explanation of
how these behaviors may contribute to the maintenance of unrealistic beliefs is that patients use their
safety behaviors as a source of information about the situation (behavior as information): the behavior is
clear evidence of the danger. This study investigates whether, relative to non-clinical control participants,
anxious participants actually infer danger on the basis of their safety behaviors, rather than on the basis
of objective information.
Methods: Three groups of individuals affected by anxiety disorders (31 obsessive-compulsive participants,
22 panic participants, and 17 participants with social phobia) and a group (31) of non-clinical
controls rated the danger perceived in scripts in which information about objective safety vs. objective
danger, and safety behavior vs. no-safety behavior were systematically varied.
Results: As expected, anxious participants were influenced by both objective danger information and
safety behavior information, while the non-clinical controls were mainly influenced by objective danger
but not by safety behavior information. The effect was disturbance specific, but only for individuals with
social phobia and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Conclusions: The tendency to infer danger on the basis of the use of safety behavior may play a role in the
development and maintenance of anxiety disorders.
Tipologia CRIS:
14.a.1 Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
Safety-seeking behaviors; Anxiety disorders; Panic disorder; Social phobia; Obsessive-compulsive disorder; Behavior as information
Elenco autori:
Gangemi, Amelia; Francesco, Mancini; Marcel van den, Hout
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