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1  .05), regardless of coping style (active or avoidant).
2 ded to be anxious, perfectionistic, and harm avoidant.
3 lly significant levels of intrusive (9%) and avoidant (16.7%) symptoms were reported.
4               Exposures of interest included avoidant and direct problem-solving coping behaviors and
5 igms in rodents produce lasting increases in avoidant and inhibitory responses to both immediate and
6 ines three organized types: secure, insecure avoidant and insecure resistant, all considered adaptive
7 an participants inversely select competition avoidant and risk diluting strategies depending on perce
8 e who are highly disturbed, constricted, and avoidant, and groups together patients with bulimic symp
9 sonality disorders (schizotypal, borderline, avoidant, and obsessive-compulsive) over a 1-year follow
10 ity disorder groups-schizotypal, borderline, avoidant, and obsessive-compulsive-and in a comparison g
11 h sham-operated monkeys displayed heightened avoidant, anxious, and aggressive behaviors, those with
12 elated with lingual gyrus activation, whilst avoidant attachment was negatively correlated with lingu
13 ement, linking it with threat and dismissive-avoidant attachment, and studying how authoritarians avo
14 of MO relationships as secure, resistant, or avoidant attachments.
15 uster C anxious, fearful group (obsessional, avoidant) became more pronounced.
16        Sapap3-null mice failed to extinguish avoidant behavior in platform-mediated avoidance due to
17 circuit', is thought to drive adaptive, harm-avoidant behavior in threatening environments.
18                                              Avoidant behavior is a defining feature of pediatric anx
19  from injury, while acute pain as failure of avoidant behavior, and a mesolimbic threshold process th
20 , including negative self-esteem, anxious or avoidant behavior, poor emotional knowledge, and difficu
21 ice also exhibited deficits in extinction of avoidant behavior, which were modulated by ITC(d) neural
22 ich represent expected risk and predict risk-avoidant behavior.
23  the human third trimester) showed increased avoidant behaviors as adults that failed to improve, or
24                                 By contrast, avoidant behaviors in these same mice were drastically i
25 y and treatment response are correlated with avoidant behaviors thought be performed to alleviate obs
26             Patient-perceived lymphedema and avoidant behaviors were assessed through interview and a
27                       Anxiety often leads to avoidant behaviors which upon repetition may become habi
28 ncertus (NI) amplifies aversion and promotes avoidant behaviors.
29 (including high rates of incarceration), and avoidant behaviour because of negative interactions with
30 n results in the deployment of adaptive harm-avoidant behaviours.
31                                    This harm-avoidant bias after citalopram was also evident in behav
32 riences of being involved with unsupportive, avoidant boards with a poor understanding of safety, qua
33 ety of personality disorders was manifested; avoidant, borderline, and obsessive-compulsive were most
34           Univariate analyses indicated that avoidant, borderline, histrionic, paranoid, schizoid, an
35                           Mice made socially avoidant by the stress of chronic social defeats showed
36 cial-psychopathic, emotionally dysregulated, avoidant-constricted, narcissistic, and histrionic) and
37 ed (p<0.01) coping decreased over time while avoidant coping (p=0.20) use remained stable.
38 g mean (SD) utilization score was 2.5 (0.5), avoidant coping mean (SD) utilization score was 2.3 (0.5
39 risk factors for distress include the use of avoidant coping strategies, negative body image, feeling
40 burying task, and quantified both active and avoidant coping strategies.
41                                           An avoidant coping style was associated with significantly
42                                              Avoidant coping use 30 days after hospitalization mediat
43                                              Avoidant coping was associated with higher anxiety and p
44 of approach-oriented coping and reduction in avoidant coping were associated with higher QOL and lowe
45 ased burying (active coping) and immobility (avoidant coping) in the defensive burying task in female
46 changes in approach-oriented coping, but not avoidant coping, significantly mediated the effects of E
47 of the processes by which anxious youth make avoidant decisions and how these choices are reinforced
48                            Finally, socially avoidant, defeated mice exhibited significant reductions
49 issues of interpersonal relatedness and used avoidant defenses (anaclitic patients) and 48 primarily
50              The PDQ-R scores indicated that avoidant, dependent, passive-aggressive, histrionic, nar
51 ed with the DSMPTSD-IV scale), intrusive and avoidant disaster-related symptoms (measured with the Im
52    Social anxiety disorder (social phobia or avoidant disorder) was significantly more likely to be f
53 nal, clinical factors, and anxiety levels or avoidant-distracted coping.
54 acking," "infrequent and unhealthy eating," "avoidant eating," and "emotional and external eating." T
55     These findings predict losses of drought avoidant evergreens from tropical forests under global c
56 ct-biased attention: a Vigilant group and an Avoidant group.
57 ion had a significantly higher prevalence of avoidant, histrionic, narcissistic, and borderline perso
58 tients were classified as using an active or avoidant illness-related coping style.
59 timulation in the insula only in stimulation-avoidant individuals.
60 nd transition (6 studies) from ambivalent to avoidant insecure attachment pattern and from passive to
61 hile others displayed independence (insecure avoidant-like).
62 ntified four coping profiles (active/social, avoidant, mixed/ambivalent, infrequent) that were associ
63  each target species demonstrated intrusive, avoidant or unresponsive root placement, resulting in a
64 rline, schizotypal, obsessive-compulsive, or avoidant) or a DSM-IV diagnosis of major depressive diso
65 ed risk for offspring antisocial (P = .003), avoidant (P = .01), borderline (P = .002), depressive (P
66                  In addition, borderline and avoidant patients exhibited smaller increases in insula-
67            Borderline patients differed from avoidant patients in insula-ventral anterior cingulate f
68 d they differ from both healthy subjects and avoidant patients in neural activity during habituation.
69 als at risk for psychopathology presented an avoidant pattern of ocular exploration of faces.
70 actor had high loadings only on schizoid and avoidant PD.
71 ty disorder was predicted by the presence of avoidant PersD (34% lower) and dependent PersD (14% lowe
72                              The presence of avoidant PersD predicted a 41% lower likelihood of socia
73             The observed association between avoidant personality and schizophrenia supports the rece
74                                     Risk for avoidant personality disorder (9.41% +/- 3.17%) was incr
75 and social withdrawal/behavioral inhibition (avoidant personality disorder [healthy aging], negative
76 alized, and generalized--as well as rates of avoidant personality disorder by direct interview of 106
77 eria appeared to overdiagnose antisocial and avoidant personality disorder in adolescents.
78 ike healthy subjects, neither borderline nor avoidant personality disorder patients exhibited increas
79 , borderline patients, healthy subjects, and avoidant personality disorder patients viewed novel and
80 s of borderline, schizotypal, dependent, and avoidant personality disorder symptoms and reported more
81                           Panic disorder and avoidant personality disorder were associated with less
82 tive risks for generalized social phobia and avoidant personality disorder were markedly higher (appr
83  type (and its probable axis II counterpart, avoidant personality disorder) that occurs more often am
84         They also hypothesized that rates of avoidant personality disorder, a frequent comorbid condi
85 tive countertransference was associated with avoidant personality disorder, which was also related to
86 thological comparison group of patients with avoidant personality disorder.
87  adults had significantly higher T score for avoidant personality reflecting increased social anxiety
88 uster C dimensional scores, particularly the avoidant personality score, were highly intercorrelated
89 ster C dimensional scores-in particular, the avoidant personality score-were higher for the schizophr
90 pected, jCSDS-exposed mice showed a socially avoidant phenotype in open-field social interaction test
91                           We found that this avoidant phenotype persisted for up to one month followi
92 s with fraX may be related to the associated avoidant response.
93 ent time to prepare appropriate defensive or avoidant responses.
94                                              Avoidant restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) is a f
95                                              Avoidant restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) is cha
96 lance study of children and adolescents with avoidant restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID).
97 osa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder, avoidant-restrictive food intake disorder, pica, and rum
98 mposite measure for the ARFID phenotype (ie, avoidant/restrictive eating with clinically significant
99                          The neurobiology of avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) is poo
100  gut-brain interaction (DGBI) may experience avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) sympto
101 the inclusion of the new diagnostic category Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID).
102 ons include the addition of three disorders (avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder, rumination di
103  bulimia nervosa, binge-eating disorder, and avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder.
104 h binge-eating disorder, and 589 (8.9%) with avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder.
105 ing early-onset anorexia nervosa (EO-AN) and avoidant/restrictive food intake disorders (ARFID).
106 , (3) conflicted-shy (2335 [24.6%]), and (4) avoidant-shy (1819 [19.2%]).
107         Additionally, children classified as avoidant-shy attained lower social occupation classes at
108 o be a developmental mechanism connecting an avoidant-shy childhood temperament and greater cardiomet
109                    Path analyses showed that avoidant-shy children spent less time in MVPA in adolesc
110 cursor associated with the development of an avoidant-shy temperament (eg, introvert vs avoidant-shy:
111 other temperament profiles (eg, introvert vs avoidant-shy: beta = 0.10; b = 0.25; 95% CI, 0.14-0.35;
112 n avoidant-shy temperament (eg, introvert vs avoidant-shy: odds ratio, 1.13; 95% CI, 1.04-1.23).
113       The most common axis II disorders were avoidant (six subjects), antisocial (four subjects), and
114 = 0.44; P = .01) and slightly reduced use of avoidant strategies ( B = -0.44; SE = 0.23; P = .06) fro
115 lity of the drought tolerant relative to the avoidant strategies.
116 ticism being strongly related to an anxious, avoidant style and affective instability related to more
117 easily startled developed first, followed by avoidant symptoms and finally by symptoms from the intru
118 ported significantly more social anxiety and avoidant symptoms than in-person ASD participants.
119 who did not to have PTSD, more intrusive and avoidant symptoms, and greater levels of other posttraum
120   These consisted of positive, negative, and avoidant symptoms; odd speech; suspicious behavior; soci
121 rder demonstrated significantly greater harm-avoidant temperament, immature defenses, and over-connec
122            By contrast, only one of the food-avoidant traits, satiety responsiveness, was negatively
123 on of male mice into "susceptible" (socially avoidant) versus "resilient" (expressing control-level s
124 ues in a variety of socially affiliative and avoidant ways.

 
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