Nebraska Symposium on Motivation, 1995, Volume 43: Perspectives on Anxiety, Panic, and Fear
Nebraska Symposium on Motivation, 1995, Volume 43: Perspectives on Anxiety, Panic, and Fear
Carroll E. Izard and Eric A. Youngstrom open with a review of Differential Emotions Theory. In the second chapter, Jeffrey A. Gray and Neil McNaughton summarize and update Gray's neuropsychological theory of anxiety. Susan Mineka and Richard Zinbarg consider what modern conditioning theory contributes to the understanding of emotion, and Richard J. McNally offers an overview of the application of experimental cognitive paradigms to fear, panic, and anxiety.
The volume concludes with a new version of David H. Barlow's theory of emotional disorders. Barlow, Bruce F. Chorpita, and Julia Turovsky draw from work on emotion, neurophysiology, attributions, learning, ethology, attention, and child development to describe how the inappropriate activation of fear (e.g., a panic attack) can trigger events that may eventually become a clinical anxiety disorder.
Perspectives on Anxiety, Panic, and Fear confirms that anxiety, panic, and fear are complex phenomena requiring a multidimensional approach that ranges from neuroanatomy to conditioning.
Author: Nebraska Symposium
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
Published: 10/01/1996
Pages: 351
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.57lbs
Size: 9.32h x 6.30w x 1.28d
ISBN: 9780803223820
About the Author
Debra A. Hope is an associate professor of psychology at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Her recent journal publications forcus on social phobia.