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Cynthia L. Turk

Researcher at Washburn University

Publications -  24
Citations -  1904

Cynthia L. Turk is an academic researcher from Washburn University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Social anxiety. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 24 publications receiving 1764 citations. Previous affiliations of Cynthia L. Turk include La Salle University & Oklahoma State University–Stillwater.

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Empirical validation and psychometric evaluation of the Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation Scale in patients with social anxiety disorder.

TL;DR: Standard scoring of the BFNE may not be optimal for patients with social anxiety disorder, and confirmatory factor analysis indicated a 2-factor solution to be more appropriate.
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Social anxiety, alcohol expectancies, and self-efficacy as predictors of heavy drinking in college students

TL;DR: As predicted by the model, socially anxious college students with low self-efficacy for avoiding heavy drinking in social situations and high positive expectancies for social facilitation reported more alcohol consumption than other socially anxious individuals.
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Impairment and quality of life in individuals with generalized anxiety disorder.

TL;DR: Individuals with GAD, with and without comorbid Axis I diagnoses, showed few differences on measures of impairment (differing only on impairment in social functioning), however, individuals with G AD andComorbid disorders perceived their lives as less satisfying than did individuals withGAD without comorebid diagnoses.
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Effects of Emotion on Pain Reports, Tolerance and Physiology

TL;DR: As predicted, those who participated in the anxiety or depression condition showed reduced pain tolerance after induction of these negative emotions; pain severity ratings became most pronounced in the depression condition.
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Multimodal comparisons of social phobia subtypes and avoidant personality disorder.

TL;DR: Significant differences across response domains were found between the circumscribed social phobia and the generalized groups, and there was substantial overlap of problems between generalized socialphobia individuals with and without avoidant personality disorder.