Pages that link to "Q35621547"
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The following pages link to A phenotype of early infancy predicts reactivity of the amygdala in male adults (Q35621547):
Displaying 33 items.
- A developmental neuroscience perspective on affect-biased attention (Q28079001) (← links)
- The nature of individual differences in inhibited temperament and risk for psychiatric disease: A review and meta-analysis. (Q30387349) (← links)
- Neural substrates of childhood anxiety disorders: a review of neuroimaging findings (Q30461311) (← links)
- Enduring influence of early temperament on neural mechanisms mediating attention-emotion conflict in adults (Q33987015) (← links)
- Structural and functional bases of inhibited temperament (Q34597302) (← links)
- Behavioral inhibition and developmental risk: a dual-processing perspective (Q34675863) (← links)
- Amygdala-cingulate intrinsic connectivity is associated with degree of social inhibition (Q34757229) (← links)
- Neurocircuitry underlying risk and resilience to social anxiety disorder (Q35038903) (← links)
- Preschool externalizing behavior predicts gender-specific variation in adolescent neural structure (Q35058354) (← links)
- A translational neuroscience approach to understanding the development of social anxiety disorder and its pathophysiology (Q35126081) (← links)
- Face Shape and Behavior: Implications of Similarities in Infants and Adults (Q35884616) (← links)
- Impaired face recognition is associated with social inhibition (Q36563076) (← links)
- The neural correlates of emotion-based cognitive control in adults with early childhood behavioral inhibition (Q36572342) (← links)
- Frontolimbic functioning during threat-related attention: Relations to early behavioral inhibition and anxiety in children (Q36656010) (← links)
- Behavioral inhibition and risk for developing social anxiety disorder: a meta-analytic study (Q36726864) (← links)
- Behavioral inhibition in childhood predicts smaller hippocampal volume in adolescent offspring of parents with panic disorder (Q37347578) (← links)
- Peril and pleasure: an rdoc-inspired examination of threat responses and reward processing in anxiety and depression. (Q37633514) (← links)
- Development of self-inflicted injury: Comorbidities and continuities with borderline and antisocial personality traits (Q38980241) (← links)
- Developmental Contributors to Trauma Response: The Importance of Sensitive Periods, Early Environment, and Sex Differences (Q39004267) (← links)
- Genetic predisposition to high anxiety- and depression-like behavior coincides with diminished DNA methylation in the adult rat amygdala. (Q39104263) (← links)
- Altered Prefrontal Cortex Function Marks Heightened Anxiety Risk in Children. (Q40966807) (← links)
- ALL OUR SONS: THE DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY AND NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY OF BOYS AT RISK. (Q47839220) (← links)
- Perspectives on two temperamental biases. (Q52684401) (← links)
- Childhood behavioral inhibition is associated with impaired mentalizing in adolescence. (Q53422985) (← links)
- Exploring Shyness among Veterinary Medical Students: Implications for Mental and Social Wellness. (Q55453734) (← links)
- Threat-related Attention Bias in Socioemotional Development: A Critical Review and Methodological Considerations (Q90607094) (← links)
- Impaired neural habituation to neutral faces in families genetically enriched for social anxiety disorder (Q90627926) (← links)
- Approach, avoidance, and the detection of conflict in the development of behavioral inhibition (Q92145474) (← links)
- Personality development in the context of individual traits and parenting dynamics (Q92373149) (← links)
- Extending the neurocircuitry of behavioural inhibition: a role for the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis in risk for anxiety disorders (Q92544520) (← links)
- The Neurobiology of Panic: A Chronic Stress Disorder (Q95643322) (← links)
- Infant behavioral reactivity predicts change in amygdala volume 12 years later (Q95839498) (← links)
- Individual differences in sensitivity to the early environment as a function of amygdala and hippocampus volumes: An exploratory analysis in 12-year-old boys (Q104506479) (← links)