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Norman B. Schmidt

Researcher at Florida State University

Publications -  537
Citations -  23078

Norman B. Schmidt is an academic researcher from Florida State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Anxiety sensitivity. The author has an hindex of 73, co-authored 519 publications receiving 20442 citations. Previous affiliations of Norman B. Schmidt include University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center & University of Texas Medical Branch.

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The role of anxiety sensitivity in the pathogenesis of panic : Prospective evaluation of spontaneous panic attacks during acute stress

TL;DR: A large, nonclinical sample of young adults was prospectively followed over a 5-week highly stressful period of time and anxiety sensitivity was found to predict the development of spontaneous panic attacks after controlling for a history of panic attacks and trait anxiety.
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The schema questionnaire: Investigation of psychometric properties and the hierarchical structure of a measure of maladaptive schemas

TL;DR: The Schema Questionnaire (SQ) as mentioned in this paper was developed using five independent samples (N=1,564) and was used to assess schemas relevant to personality disorders.
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Attention training for generalized social anxiety disorder.

TL;DR: Results support attention-based models of anxiety and suggest that attention training is a promising alternative or complementary intervention for social anxiety in patients with a primary diagnosis of generalized SAD.
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Specificity of social anxiety disorder as a risk factor for alcohol and cannabis dependence.

TL;DR: Among the internalizing disorders, SAD appears to serve as a unique risk factor for the subsequent onset of cannabis and alcohol dependence, after controlling for theoretically-relevant variables.
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Anxiety sensitivity: Prospective prediction of panic attacks and Axis I pathology

TL;DR: In a large nonclinical sample of young adults, AS was found to predict the incidence of anxiety disorder diagnoses and overall Axis I diagnoses in those with no history ofaxis I diagnoses at study entry.