The Role of Early Experience and Cognitive Vulnerability: Presenting a Unified Model of the Etiology of Panic

dc.contributor.author

McGinn, LK

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Nooner, KB

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Cohen, J

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Leaberry, KD

dc.date.accessioned

2017-01-28T23:38:13Z

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2017-01-28T23:38:13Z

dc.date.issued

2015-08-22

dc.description.abstract

Cognitive vulnerability models have been developed to explicate the etiology of panic and other anxiety disorders. This study takes a step forward by presenting a unified vulnerability model that incorporates a continuum of proximal and distal factors involved in the etiology of panic. The present study tested distal elements of the model, including childhood histories of vicarious and instrumental learning, and cognitive constructs such as anxiety sensitivity and perceived control. Our study found that parental modeling of the dangerousness of anxiety symptoms accounted for more model variance than from direct experiences with arousal-reactive symptoms or from parental reinforcement of the child’s own sick role behavior when experiencing arousal reactive symptoms. We found that parental modeling independently predicted model variance even when perceived control was included in the model. Our results indicated that low perceived anxiety control and anxiety about bodily symptoms uniquely accounted for variance in the model. Our findings add to the growing body of research and suggest that anxiety about bodily symptoms and low perceived control together may interact to create a stronger distal vulnerability construct for panic than either construct alone in individuals whose childhood caregivers may have modeled fear of anxiety symptoms. The results of this study provide support for the inclusion of distal factors in unified cognitive vulnerability models of panic disorder as well as for future prospective research of these constructs.

dc.identifier.eissn

1573-2819

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0147-5916

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13513

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Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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Cognitive Therapy and Research

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10.1007/s10608-015-9673-9

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The Role of Early Experience and Cognitive Vulnerability: Presenting a Unified Model of the Etiology of Panic

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Nooner, KB|0000-0003-3756-649X

pubs.begin-page

508

pubs.end-page

519

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4

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Clinical Science Departments

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Duke

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Psychiatry, Child & Family Mental Health and Developmental Neuroscience

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences

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School of Medicine

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

39

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