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The relationship between attachment style, anxiety sensitivity and interpretive bias among adolescent nonclinical panickers

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posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00 authored by David AustinDavid Austin, R Jamieson, J Richards, J Winkelman
Elevated anxiety sensitivity and the tendency to catastrophically misinterpret ambiguous bodily sensations has been demonstrated in people who experience nonclinical levels of panic (Richards, Austin, & Alvarenga, 2001), and anxiety sensitivity has been shown to be associated with insecure attachment in adolescents and young adults (Weems, Berman, Silverman, and Saavedra, 2001). This study investigated the relationship between attachment style, anxiety sensitivity and catastrophic misinterpretation among 11 nonclinical panickers and 58 nonanxious controls aged 18 to 19 years. Participants completed the Brief Bodily Sensations Interpretation Questionnaire (BBSIQ), Anxiety Sensitivity Index (ASI) and an attachment questionnaire. The hypothesis that insecurely attached individuals would demonstrate greater catastrophic misinterpretation and higher anxiety sensitivity than securely attached individuals was not supported; however, nonclinical panickers gave more anxiety-related interpretations of ambiguous internal stimuli than nonanxious controls. Results do not support the notion that attachment style is related to anxiety sensitivity or catastrophic misinterpretation (regardless of panic experience). Results do, however, support the notion that anxiety-related misinterpretation of ambiguous somatic sensations precedes the onset of panic disorder.

History

Journal

Behaviour change

Volume

23

Issue

1

Pagination

31 - 41

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Location

Cambridge, England

ISSN

0813-4839

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2006, Cambridge University Press

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