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1 voxamine for the treatment of social phobia (social anxiety disorder).
2 en with BI do not go on to meet criteria for social anxiety disorder.
3 rs appear to be responsible for the onset of social anxiety disorder.
4 nical and clinical neurobiological models of social anxiety disorder.
5 .9% of subjects with noncomorbid generalized social anxiety disorder.
6  account for the known neurobiology of human social anxiety disorder.
7  for current generalized, separation, and/or social anxiety disorder.
8 cceptable and effective treatment option for social anxiety disorder.
9 ures for prediction of treatment response in social anxiety disorder.
10 irments such as autism spectrum disorder and social anxiety disorder.
11 to examine a gaze-contingent intervention in social anxiety disorder.
12 ularly those with a social component such as social anxiety disorder.
13 ng children are at marked risk of developing social anxiety disorder.
14 performance and social anxiety in women with social anxiety disorder.
15 ed the long-term outcome of psychotherapy in social anxiety disorder.
16 role in the pathophysiology and treatment of social anxiety disorder.
17 st intervention for the initial treatment of social anxiety disorder.
18 ive benefits for sertraline nonresponders in social anxiety disorder.
19 the neurodevelopmental mechanisms underlying social anxiety disorder.
20 ion with approved treatments for generalized social anxiety disorder.
21  for the acute management of the symptoms of social anxiety disorder.
22 ral therapy (CBT) in adults with generalized social anxiety disorder.
23 py (CBT) have been shown to be effective for social anxiety disorder.
24 gment a full course of comprehensive CBT for social anxiety disorder.
25 ht serve as biomarkers for interventions for social anxiety disorder.
26 s in developing preventive interventions for social anxiety disorder.
27  of behavioral inhibition are a precursor of social anxiety disorder.
28 on was associated with a lifetime history of social anxiety disorder.
29  disorder, and 6.2% (CI, 4.7% to 7.9%) had a social anxiety disorder.
30 rally well-tolerated treatment for pediatric social anxiety disorder.
31 ion that overlap with features of autism and social anxiety disorder.
32 -0.42) for GAD; 0.32 (95% CI: 0.29-0.37) for social anxiety disorder; 0.32 (95% CI: 0.23-0.42) for sp
33 anxiety disorder (6.2% lifetime prevalence), social anxiety disorder (13% lifetime prevalence), and p
34                                              Social anxiety disorder-a chronic and naturally unremitt
35                         Our understanding of social anxiety disorder (also known as social phobia) ha
36                                Subjects with social anxiety disorder and age- and gender-matched heal
37 ssociation between behavioral inhibition and social anxiety disorder and an inverse relationship betw
38                                          For social anxiety disorder and attention-deficit/hyperactiv
39 , 22 male, 1 transgender, 2 undeclared) with social anxiety disorder and fear of public speaking were
40 re, of interest, more frequently observed in social anxiety disorder and specific phobia than in PTSD
41 nce-avoidance gaze patterns in patients with social anxiety disorder and specific phobias.
42 sults support a conditioning contribution to social anxiety disorder and underscore the importance of
43 relevant to mental health disorders, such as social anxiety disorders and small animal phobias, that
44 g from emotion regulation disorders, such as social-anxiety disorder and psychopathy.
45 th introversion (a core personality trait in social anxiety disorder) and with increased limbic activ
46 vity in amygdala and insula in patients with social anxiety disorder, and genetic studies are increas
47 acotherapy for generalized anxiety disorder, social anxiety disorder, and panic disorder.
48 n in healthy participants, participants with social anxiety disorder, and participants with acute str
49 matching the biased content of rumination in social anxiety disorder, and robust to controlling for o
50 pressive disorder (MDD), panic disorder, and social anxiety disorder are among the most prevalent and
51                 Separation, generalized, and social anxiety disorders are common and impairing for ch
52 e) and adolescents (12-17 years of age) with social anxiety disorder as their predominant psychiatric
53 disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, and social anxiety disorder, as well as autism and schizophr
54 n, posttraumatic stress disorder, addiction, social anxiety disorder, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia
55 linical severity associated with generalized social anxiety disorder, both alone and with comorbid ps
56 ic therapy were both efficacious in treating social anxiety disorder, but there were significant diff
57 of behavioral inhibition are associated with social anxiety disorder by adolescence.
58  association of chronic high inhibition with social anxiety disorder by adolescence.
59                   Primary search topics were social anxiety disorder, cognitive behavior therapy, and
60 vel gaze-contingent music reward therapy for social anxiety disorder designed to reduce attention dwe
61                                              Social anxiety disorder during adolescence or young adul
62                                Patients with social anxiety disorder exhibit increased attentional dw
63    Adult outpatients with DSM-IV generalized social anxiety disorder for 6 months or longer were rand
64 ere included: posttraumatic stress disorder, social anxiety disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, p
65                                  Generalized social anxiety disorder (GSAD) is characterized by aberr
66 ty to threat in individuals with generalized social anxiety disorder (GSAD).
67 year, only 0.5% of subjects with generalized social anxiety disorder had been accurately diagnosed.
68    Persons with average-severity generalized social anxiety disorder had probabilities of graduating
69 ral inhibition, a temperamental precursor of social anxiety disorder (haplotype P = 3 x 10(-5); odds
70  [large effect size] [95% CI, 0.44 to 1.57]; social anxiety disorder: Hedges g = 0.41 [small to mediu
71 ta-analysis of interventions for adults with social anxiety disorder, identified from published and u
72 rmined the costs associated with generalized social anxiety disorder in a managed care setting.
73 efficacy of psychodynamic therapy and CBT in social anxiety disorder in a multicenter randomized cont
74 re most effective for the acute treatment of social anxiety disorder in adults.
75 e results suggest a grounding of symptoms of social anxiety disorder in more basic neuro-computationa
76                                              Social anxiety disorder in nondepressed persons at basel
77 dynamic therapy were efficacious in treating social anxiety disorder, in both the short- and long-ter
78 ncerning clinical neurobiological aspects of social anxiety disorder, including the developmental neu
79             Generalized anxiety disorder and social anxiety disorder interactomes showed exclusive an
80                                     Although social anxiety disorder is a common and sometimes disabl
81                                              Social anxiety disorder is a debilitating, highly preval
82                                              Social anxiety disorder is common and debilitating, and
83                                              Social anxiety disorder is common and impairing.
84                                              Social anxiety disorder is the most common anxiety disor
85                                              Social anxiety disorder is thought to involve emotional
86       The generalized type of social phobia (social anxiety disorder) is a severe and often disabling
87 cial phobia (gSP), also known as generalized social anxiety disorder, is characterized by excessive f
88 chizophrenia, and borderline personality and social anxiety disorders, may be reduced by oxytocin adm
89 -deficit/hyperactivity disorder (n = 1), and social anxiety disorder (n = 1).
90 medicated participants (N=22 generalized and social anxiety disorder/N=23 controls) recruited from Wa
91  169 medication-free adults with generalized social anxiety disorder, of whom 144 completed the 12-we
92 ugmentation strategy for exposure therapy in social anxiety disorder, one that may be especially effe
93 xiety disorder, separation anxiety disorder, social anxiety disorder, or anxiety disorder not otherwi
94  humans diagnosed as having specific phobia, social anxiety disorder, panic disorder with or without
95 isorder, selective mutism, specific phobias, social anxiety disorder, panic disorder, agoraphobia, an
96  disorders: major depressive disorder (MDD), social anxiety disorder, panic disorder, generalized anx
97 edged as an important etiologic mechanism in social anxiety disorder, past psychophysiological experi
98 the treatment of depression, panic disorder, social anxiety disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder,
99 ety disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, social anxiety disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder,
100 les, we examined how self-report symptoms of social anxiety disorder predict choices in a socially fr
101 pants were 105 treatment-seeking adults with social anxiety disorder, randomly allocated to 12 weeks
102 ne women 19-60 years of age with generalized social anxiety disorder received placebo intranasal spra
103                                              Social anxiety disorder (SAD) (also known as "social pho
104                                              Social anxiety disorder (SAD) can be adequately treated
105                           Many patients with social anxiety disorder (SAD) experience inadequate symp
106             Only a minority of patients with social anxiety disorder (SAD) has a robust therapeutic r
107                                              Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is a crippling psychiatric
108                                              Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is a prevalent childhood-o
109                                              Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is characterized by fears
110                                              Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is common and debilitating
111                  Cognitive models posit that social anxiety disorder (SAD) is maintained by biased in
112       Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for social anxiety disorder (SAD) is thought to enhance cogn
113                                              Social anxiety disorder (SAD) places a profound burden o
114      Ninety-eight women meeting criteria for Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) received two mindfulness s
115 nnectivity were measured in 38 patients with social anxiety disorder (SAD) to predict subsequent trea
116 ion (MBSR) are thought to help patients with social anxiety disorder (SAD) via distinct emotion-regul
117 fect, but whether anxiety syndromes, such as social anxiety disorder (SAD), are characterized by an o
118 abnormalities underlie pathological anxiety, social anxiety disorder (SAD)-although among the most co
119 ributing to the emergence and maintenance of social anxiety disorder (SAD).
120 ioral therapy (CBT) outcome in patients with social anxiety disorder (SAD).
121 into volumes of subcortical brain regions in social anxiety disorder (SAD).
122 losely mimics the key behavioral symptoms of social anxiety disorder (SAD).
123 treatment with JNJ-42165279 in subjects with social anxiety disorder (SAD).
124 g the characteristic negative memory bias in social anxiety disorder (SAD).
125 ly increases the risk for later diagnosis of social anxiety disorder (SAD).
126 n (SERT) and dopamine (DAT) in patients with social anxiety disorder (SAD).
127 measures poorly predict treatment outcome in social anxiety disorder (SAD).
128 rrelations) that discriminated patients with social anxiety disorder (SAD, N=16) from controls (N=19)
129  for adolescents (N = 133; 11-17 years) with social anxiety disorder (SAD; treatment) or subclinical
130 d better outcomes on self-report measures of social anxiety disorder severity (Liebowitz Social Anxie
131                                              Social anxiety disorder should be conceptualized as a ch
132 rence [SMD], -0.55 [95% CI, -0.64 to -0.46]; social anxiety disorder: SMD, -0.67 [95% CI, -0.76 to -0
133                                              Social anxiety disorder (social phobia or avoidant disor
134 ies of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), social anxiety disorder, specific phobia, and fear condi
135 ety disorders: generalized anxiety disorder, social anxiety disorder, specific phobia, and panic diso
136  with confirmed diagnoses of panic disorder, social anxiety disorder, specific phobias, generalized a
137  disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and social anxiety disorder, suggest that CRF1 receptor anta
138 a waiting list control condition in reducing social anxiety disorder symptoms.
139 py yielded greater reductions of symptoms of social anxiety disorder than the control condition on bo
140 ghted prevalence rate of current generalized social anxiety disorder was 8.2%.
141                      Noncomorbid generalized social anxiety disorder was associated with significantl
142 community cohort of HMO members, generalized social anxiety disorder was rarely diagnosed or treated
143   Adults (n = 40) with a DSM-IV diagnosis of social anxiety disorder were randomized to placebo or yo
144  disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, or social anxiety disorder were randomly assigned by princi
145                  METHOD: Forty patients with social anxiety disorder were randomly assigned to eight
146  In an outpatient setting, 495 patients with social anxiety disorder were randomly assigned to manual
147                  A total of 45 patients with social anxiety disorder were scanned twice (11 weeks apa
148 ve outcomes for individuals with generalized social anxiety disorder who remain symptomatic after ini
149                             Outpatients with social anxiety disorder who were treated with CBT (N=209
150  utilization of health services; generalized social anxiety disorder with comorbid psychopathology wa
151 e in the short-term treatment of generalized social anxiety disorder, with efficacy and tolerability
152 ort to assess the conditioning correlates of social anxiety disorder within an ecologically enhanced
153  and anxiety (n = 59), panic disorder and/or social anxiety disorder without comorbid MDD (n = 56), a
154 ment are the best-established treatments for social anxiety disorder, yet many individuals remain sym

 
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