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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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The effects of anxiety upon attention allocation to affective stimuli

TL;DR: The results suggest that biased attention processes for aversive stimuli may contribute to the greater female propensity for anxiety disorders.
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Dimensional assessment of posttraumatic stress disorder in DSM-5.

TL;DR: The present paper describes the development of the National Stressful Events Survey for PTSD-Short Scale (NSESSS-PTSD), a new self-report scale for PTSD that is brief (9 items), free of copyright restrictions, and consistent with DSM-5 diagnostic criteria.
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Psychometric properties of the dimensional anxiety scales for dsm-v in an unselected sample of german treatment seeking patients

TL;DR: The aim of this study was to examine the unidimensionality, reliability, validity, and clinical sensitivity of brief self‐rated scales for specific anxiety disorders in an unselected German sample of consecutive attendees to a psychological clinic.
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Towards a cognitive-learning formulation of youth anxiety: A narrative review of theory and evidence and implications for treatment

TL;DR: It is proposed that conditioning and cognitive factors linked to differences in engagement of underlying neural circuits across development contribute to an internal representation of a wide range of stimuli as threatening, to which anxious children and adolescents adopt maladaptive attention regulation patterns of predominantly threat monitoring or threat avoidance.
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Autonomic reactivity of panic patients during a CO2 inhalation procedure

TL;DR: Investigation of the data showed that elevation in blood pressure and breathholding were present during some of the panic attacks, suggesting that some attacks may represent a complex psychophysiological response with elements of a “freezing” reaction.