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Michelle G. Craske

Researcher at University of California, Los Angeles

Publications -  622
Citations -  41355

Michelle G. Craske is an academic researcher from University of California, Los Angeles. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Panic disorder. The author has an hindex of 100, co-authored 571 publications receiving 35144 citations. Previous affiliations of Michelle G. Craske include Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior & University of California, San Diego.

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Heartbeat perception in social anxiety before and during speech anticipation.

TL;DR: Investigation of differences in heartbeat perception as a proxy of interoception in 48 individuals high and low in social anxiety at baseline and while anticipating a public speech revealed lower error scores for high fearful participants both in baseline and during speech anticipation.
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Testing a Hierarchical Model of Neuroticism and Its Cognitive Facets: Latent Structure and Prospective Prediction of First Onsets of Anxiety and Unipolar Mood Disorders During 3 Years in Late Adolescence

TL;DR: Neuroticism and several other traits have been proposed to confer vulnerability for unipolar mood disorders (UMDs) and anxiety disorders (ADs), but it is unclear whether the associations of these vulnerabilities with these disorders are attributable to a latent variable common to all vulnerabilities, more narrow latent variables, or both.
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The role of inflammation in core features of depression: Insights from paradigms using exogenously-induced inflammation

TL;DR: It is concluded that inflammation likely plays a role in exaggerated reactivity to negative information, altered reward reactivity, and somatic symptoms as well as less evidence supporting an effect of inflammation on cognitive control as assessed by standard neuropsychological measures.
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A dimensional approach to measuring anxiety for DSM‐5

TL;DR: Although further evaluation and refinement of the scales (particularly the specific phobia and agoraphobia scales) is needed, the results provide preliminary support for the use of these scales in DSM‐5 and thus take an important step toward the integration of standardized dimensional measurement into the diagnosis of anxiety disorders.
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Chronic and episodic interpersonal stress as statistically unique predictors of depression in two samples of emerging adults.

TL;DR: As SES declined, there was an increasing role for noninter personal chronic stress and noninterpersonal major SLEs, coupled with a decreasing role for interpersonal chronic stress, and Implications for future etiological research were discussed.