Risk estimation in relation to anxiety and depression for low probability negative events

被引:1
作者
Dev, Amelia S. [1 ]
Broos, Hannah C. [1 ]
Llabre, Maria M. [1 ]
Saab, Patrice G. [1 ]
Timpano, Kiara R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Miami, Dept Psychol, 5665 Ponce Leon, Coral Gables, FL 33146 USA
关键词
MECHANICAL TURK; DISTRESS TOLERANCE; SOCIAL ANXIETY; TRAIT ANXIETY; ALCOHOL-USE; AVOIDANCE; DISORDER; COVID-19; INFECTION; REALISM;
D O I
10.1016/j.brat.2024.104500
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
Foundational cognitive models propose that people with anxiety and depression show risk estimation bias, but most literature does not compute true risk estimation bias by comparing people's subjective risk estimates to their individualized reality (i.e., person -level objective risk). In a diverse community sample (N = 319), we calculated risk estimation bias by comparing people's subjective risk estimates for contracting COVID-19 to their individualized objective risk. Person -level objective risk was consistently low and did not differ across symptom levels, suggesting that for low probability negative events, people with greater symptoms show risk estimation bias that is driven by subjective risk estimates. Greater levels of anxiety, depression, and COVID-specific perseverative cognition separately predicted higher subjective risk estimates. In a model including COVID-specific perseverative cognition alongside anxiety and depression scores, the only significant predictor of subjective risk estimates was COVID-specific perseverative cognition, indicating that symptoms more closely tied to feared outcomes may more strongly influence risk estimation. Finally, subjective risk estimates predicted information -seeking behavior and eating when anxious, but did not significantly predict alcohol or marijuana use, drinking to cope, or information avoidance. Implications for clinical practitioners and future research are discussed.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
[31]   Social anxiety compared to depression better accounts for enhanced acquisition of self-reported anxiety toward faces paired with negative evaluation in a conditioning task [J].
Fung, Klint ;
Alden, Lynn E. .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOPATHOLOGY, 2020, 11 (01)
[32]   A Preliminary Study of Anxiety, Negative Affect, Experiential Avoidance, and Delaying of Aversive Events [J].
Salters-Pedneault, Kristalyn ;
Diller, James W. .
BEHAVIOUR CHANGE, 2013, 30 (04) :241-248
[33]   Characteristics associated with low resilience in patients with depression and/or anxiety disorders [J].
Min, Jung-Ah ;
Jung, Young-Eun ;
Kim, Dai-Jin ;
Yim, Hyeon-Woo ;
Kim, Jung-Jin ;
Kim, Tae-Suk ;
Lee, Chang-Uk ;
Lee, Chul ;
Chae, Jeong-Ho .
QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH, 2013, 22 (02) :231-241
[34]   Characteristics associated with low resilience in patients with depression and/or anxiety disorders [J].
Jung-Ah Min ;
Young-Eun Jung ;
Dai-Jin Kim ;
Hyeon-Woo Yim ;
Jung-Jin Kim ;
Tae-Suk Kim ;
Chang-Uk Lee ;
Chul Lee ;
Jeong-Ho Chae .
Quality of Life Research, 2013, 22 :231-241
[35]   Anxiety, depression and risk of cannabis use: Examining the internalising pathway to use among Chilean adolescents [J].
Stapinski, Lexine A. ;
Montgomery, Alan A. ;
Araya, Ricardo .
DRUG AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE, 2016, 166 :109-115
[36]   A Latent Growth Examination of Fear Development in Infancy: Contributions of Maternal Depression and the Risk for Toddler Anxiety [J].
Gartstein, Maria A. ;
Bridgett, David J. ;
Rothbart, Mary K. ;
Robertson, Christopher ;
Iddins, Erin ;
Ramsay, Kristin ;
Schlect, Sarah .
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2010, 46 (03) :651-668
[37]   Relation of Depression and Anxiety to Self- and Peer-Reported Relational Aggression [J].
Zimmer-Gembeck, Melanie J. ;
Pronk, Rhiarne E. .
AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR, 2012, 38 (01) :16-30
[38]   Depression in Danish and Swedish elite football players and its relation to perfectionism and anxiety [J].
Jensen, Stine Nylandsted ;
Ivarsson, Andreas ;
Fallby, Johan ;
Dankers, Silke ;
Elbe, Anne-Marie .
PSYCHOLOGY OF SPORT AND EXERCISE, 2018, 36 :147-155
[39]   Depression and social anxiety in relation to problematic smartphone use: The prominent role of rumination [J].
Elhai, Jon D. ;
Tiamiyu, Mojisola ;
Weeks, Justin .
INTERNET RESEARCH, 2018, 28 (02) :315-332
[40]   Anorexia nervosa and its relation to depression, anxiety, alexithymia and emotional processing deficits [J].
Lule, Dorothee ;
Schulze, Ulrike M. E. ;
Bauer, Kathrin ;
Schoell, Friederike ;
Mueller, Sabine ;
Fladung, Anne-Katharina ;
Uttner, Ingo .
EATING AND WEIGHT DISORDERS-STUDIES ON ANOREXIA BULIMIA AND OBESITY, 2014, 19 (02) :209-216