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Relations of Tripartite Dimensions of Emotion to Childhood Anxiety and Mood Disorders

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Abstract

This study examined preliminary higher-order models relating tripartite dimensions of emotion to severity of anxiety and depressive disorders in 100 clinically referred children and adolescents. In light of the accumulating support for multifactor models of vulnerability and negative emotion in children, the present investigation was designed to establish preliminary estimates of the structure and magnitude of the relations of three emotion factors with dimensions of social anxiety, depression, panic, generalized anxiety, obsessions/compulsions, and separation anxiety. Results were consistent with structures that minimally specified two higher-order emotion factors, yet only some parameter estimates were consistent with theory regarding the tripartite model. Problems with the measurement of tripartite factors and possibilities for further research are outlined.

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Chorpita, B.F., Plummer, C.M. & Moffitt, C.E. Relations of Tripartite Dimensions of Emotion to Childhood Anxiety and Mood Disorders. J Abnorm Child Psychol 28, 299–310 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1005152505888

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