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Published in: European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 1/2019

01-01-2019 | Anxiety Disorder | Editorial

When fear does not serve survival: anxiety disorders viewed within a developmentally appropriate context

Author: Giulia Signorini

Published in: European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry | Issue 1/2019

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Excerpt

Fear is one of the most self-preserving emotions among living beings, enabling them to detect, predict and react to hazards (e.g., with flight or fight responses), guaranteeing survival. On a cognitive perspective, fear—and its anticipatory version, anxiety—can be sustained by a ‘better safe than sorry’ principle: when facing unknown or unclear situations, we automatically tend to estimate that fearing a potential danger is more preferable than ignoring the possible existence of some risks. Thus, the costs associated with facing an unpredicted danger are considered higher than those met for worrying about it in advance. In evolutionary terms, this assumption makes perfect sense, but what happens when anxiety or fear are pervasively elicited by unrealistic, very remote or unpreventable types of threats within a given culture and context? And what happens when this occurs to human beings still in the process of building up their resilience and coping skills, still developing their representations of the world they live in as children and adolescents? …
Literature
Metadata
Title
When fear does not serve survival: anxiety disorders viewed within a developmentally appropriate context
Author
Giulia Signorini
Publication date
01-01-2019
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry / Issue 1/2019
Print ISSN: 1018-8827
Electronic ISSN: 1435-165X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00787-019-01277-w

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