The Wiley Blackwell Handbook of Social Anxiety Disorder

Featuring leading international authors working in clinical psychology and psychiatry, this handbook offer the most in-depth coverage of social anxiety disorder, including personality factors in SAD, and multicultural issues in the diagnosis, case conceptualization, and treatment of SAD.A multi-cont...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Otros Autores: Weeks, Justin W. (-)
Formato: Electrónico
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Chichester, West Sussex : Wiley Blackwell 2014.
Edición:1st ed
Materias:
Acceso en línea:Conectar con la versión electrónica
Ver en Universidad de Navarra:https://innopac.unav.es/record=b33401019*spi
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • The Wiley Blackwell Handbook of Social Anxiety Disorder; Contents; Notes on the Contributors; I Theoretical Overview: Social Anxiety Disorder; 1 Cognitive-Behavioral Models of Social Anxiety Disorder; Cognitive-Behavioral Models of Social Anxiety Disorder; Clark and Wells (1995): A Cognitive Model of SAD; Dysfunctional Processes; Rapee and Heimberg (1997): A Cognitive-Behavioral Model of SAD; Dysfunctional Processes; Comparisons Between the Models; More Recent Cognitive-Behavioral Models of SAD; Hofmann (2007): Cognitive Factors that Maintain SAD.
  • Moscovitch (2009): The Proposed Core Fear in SADStopa (2009): The Importance of the Self in Understanding SAD; Other Models of SAD; Self-Presentation Model of SAD; Reinforcement Sensitivity Theory; Interpersonal Model of SAD; Evolutionary/Psychobiological Models; Looking Across the Models; Etiology and Developmental Perspectives; Discrepancy as the Key; Social Anxiety: An Adaptive and Normative Process?; SAD: An Intrapersonal and Interpersonal Disorder; Summary and Future Directions; Note; References.
  • 2 Evolutionary Models: Practical and Conceptual Utility for the Treatment and Study of Social Anxiety DisorderGeneral Evolutionary Processes in Social Anxiety; Old and New Brain Mechanisms; Social Mentalities; Emotions: An Evolutionary, Functional Analysis of Emotion Systems; Competition and the Dynamics of Evolutionary Change; Resource Competition, Group Living, and Social Hierarchies; Competition and the Psychologies of Social Rank and Subordination; Subordination, Self-Blame, and Self-Criticism; Social Anxiety and Paranoia; Low Rank and Positive Evaluation.
  • Social Attractiveness and the Importance of Affiliative PsychologyShame, Social (Un)Attractiveness, and Social Anxiety; Emotion Regulation and Affiliation; Treatment Implications; Developing Compassion; Self-Compassion; Conclusions; Acknowledgment; References; 3 Genetic Factors in Social Anxiety Disorder; Overview; Family and Twin Evidence for Genetic Factors in SAD; Genetic Linkage Studies in SAD; Genetic Association Studies in SAD and Related Traits; Social Anxiety Disorder; Blushing; Shyness; Neuroticism; Extroversion; Behavioral Inhibition and Selective Mutism.
  • Conclusions and Future DirectionsReferences; 4 The Social Neuroscience of Social Anxiety Disorder; Introduction; The Scope of this Essay; Part 1: Current Research on Social Neuroscience of SAD; Brain Imaging of Socioemotional Processing in SAD; Physiological and Behavioral Data; Summary; Part 2: Social Neuroscientific Directions for Future Research in SAD; Genetics of SAD; Immune Function in SAD; Social Isolation in Social Anxiety; Self-Reference, Self-Reappraisal, and Social Others in SAD; Limited Scope of Currently Used Social Stimuli in SAD Research.
  • Learning About SAD from Other Disorders or Dispositions of Prosociality.