A Neurobehavioral Mechanism Linking Behaviorally Inhibited Temperament and Later Adolescent Social Anxiety - 25/11/17
, Sonya V. Troller-Renfree, MS a, Tyson V. Barker, PhD a, Lindsay C. Bowman, PhD b, Andrea Chronis-Tuscano, PhD a, Heather A. Henderson, PhD c, Jerome Kagan, PhD d, Daniel S. Pine, MD e, Nathan A. Fox, PhD aAbstract |
Objective |
Behavioral inhibition (BI) is a temperament identified in early childhood that is a risk factor for later social anxiety. However, mechanisms underlying the development of social anxiety remain unclear. To better understand the emergence of social anxiety, longitudinal studies investigating changes at behavioral neural levels are needed.
Method |
BI was assessed in the laboratory at 2 and 3 years of age (N = 268). Children returned at 12 years, and an electroencephalogram was recorded while children performed a flanker task under 2 conditions: once while believing they were being observed by peers and once while not being observed. This methodology isolated changes in error monitoring (error-related negativity) and behavior (post-error reaction time slowing) as a function of social context. At 12 years, current social anxiety symptoms and lifetime diagnoses of social anxiety were obtained.
Results |
Childhood BI prospectively predicted social-specific error-related negativity increases and social anxiety symptoms in adolescence; these symptoms directly related to clinical diagnoses. Serial mediation analysis showed that social error-related negativity changes explained relations between BI and social anxiety symptoms (n = 107) and diagnosis (n = 92), but only insofar as social context also led to increased post-error reaction time slowing (a measure of error preoccupation); this model was not significantly related to generalized anxiety.
Conclusion |
Results extend prior work on socially induced changes in error monitoring and error preoccupation. These measures could index a neurobehavioral mechanism linking BI to adolescent social anxiety symptoms and diagnosis. This mechanism could relate more strongly to social than to generalized anxiety in the peri-adolescent period.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Key words : social anxiety, behavioral inhibition, temperament, error-related negativity, post-error slowing
Plan
| Clinical guidance is available at the end of this article. |
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| This research was supported by grants from the National Institute of Mental Health (U01MH093349 and U01MH093349-S to N.A.F.), the National Science Foundation (NSF; DGE1322106 to S.V.T.), the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD; 5T32HD007542 to Melanie Killen supporting T.V.B.), and the NIMH Intramural Research Program (supporting D.S.P.). |
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| Disclosure: Dr. Fox has received additional funding from the following granting agencies: NIH (R01MH091363) for The Effects of Early Psychosocial Deprivation on Mental Health in Adolescence; Harvard University (256458-509584) for Assessing the Efficacy of Attention Bias Modification Training; the NIMH (1R01MH107444) for Prospective Determination of Neurobehavioral Risk for the Development of Emotion Disorders; the NICHD (P01HD064653) for Functions and Development of the Mirror Neuron System-Continuation; the NSF (1625495) for Collaborative Research: Action, Learning, and Social Cognition; and the National Institutes of Health (1UG3OD023279-01) for Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes in the Northern Plains Safe Passage Study Cohort. Drs. Buzzell, Barker, Bowman, Chronis-Tuscano, Henderson, Kagan, Pine and Ms. Troller-Renfree report no biomedical financial interests or potential conflicts of interest. |
Vol 56 - N° 12
P. 1097-1105 - décembre 2017 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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