Information processing biases and anxiety: a developmental perspective
Hadwin, Julie A.
Field, Andy P.
Anxiety is an emotion that appears early in childhood and follows a typical developmental course. This book provides a comprehensive overview of relevant theory and research related to the origins of information processing biases andits contribution to clinical levels of anxiety in children and adolescents. Focusing on theoretical and research issues, the book highlights how different researchers have explored diverse aspects of information processing, such as selective attention, inhibition and interpretation, in anxious children and adolescents. It further investigates the origin and treatment of information processing biases in child anxiety within the broader context of developmental psychopathology. Information Processing Biases and Anxiety: A Developmental Perspective is a unique and up-to-date summary of the development of information processing biases and anxiety in childhood and adolescence, and of the preventive methods and treatment protocols.Julie A. Hadwin is Senior Lecturer in Psychology at the University of Southampton. She has used cognitive models to study emotional disorders in childhood and has written several papers to understand attention to threat in childhood anxiety. Her publications include Teaching Children with Autism to Mindread (with Patricia Howlin and Simon Baron-Cohen, Wiley, 1999). Andy Field is Reader in Experimental Psychopathology at the University of Sussex. He has published over 50 research papers, mostly on child anxiety and human conditioning, and has written/edited 10 books including the award-winning textbook Discovering Statistics using SPSS (3rd Edition, 2009). He has received teaching awards from the University of Sussex and the British Psychological Society.
- ISBN: 978-0-470-99819-9
- Editorial: John Wiley & Sons
- Encuadernacion: Cartoné
- Páginas: 344
- Fecha Publicación: 16/04/2010
- Nº Volúmenes: 1
- Idioma: Inglés