scispace - formally typeset
H

Heidi Gazelle

Researcher at Florida State University

Publications -  31
Citations -  1948

Heidi Gazelle is an academic researcher from Florida State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Solitude & Social anxiety. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 29 publications receiving 1774 citations. Previous affiliations of Heidi Gazelle include University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill & University of Melbourne.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Anxious Solitude and Peer Exclusion: A Diathesis-Stress Model of Internalizing Trajectories in Childhood.

TL;DR: In this article, a diathesis-stress model was proposed in which the joint forces of individual vulnerability and interpersonal adversity (peer exclusion) predict depressive symptoms in children over time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Moving Toward and Away From the World: Social Approach and Avoidance Trajectories in Anxious Solitary Youth

TL;DR: The interaction of behavioral vulnerability and peer exclusion was more consistently linked to adjustment changes in anxious solitary youth than in youth with other behavioral profiles and some effects were moderated by sex.
Journal ArticleDOI

Class climate moderates peer relations and emotional adjustment in children with an early history of anxious solitude: a Child X Environment model.

TL;DR: Children with an early childhood history of anxious solitude were more rejected, poorly accepted, and victimized by peers and demonstrated more depressive symptoms in 1st-grade classrooms with negative observed emotional climate, supporting a Child x Environment model of children's social and emotional adjustment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anxious solitude and peer exclusion predict social helplessness, upset affect, and vagal regulation in response to behavioral rejection by a friend.

TL;DR: Results indicated that in a sample of 3rd graders, anxious solitary excluded children displayed more behavioral manifestations of social helplessness before and after behavioral rejection, and were observably more upset during behavioral rejection than were normative children.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anxious Solitude, Unsociability, and Peer Exclusion in Middle Childhood: A Multitrait–Multimethod Matrix

TL;DR: Results indicate that anxious solitude and peer exclusion have better convergent and divergent validity than unsociability, although there is evidence of shared method variance for all constructs.