The Association between the Development of Attentional Control and
Anxiety Symptoms during Transition into Early Adolescence: the
Random-intercept Cross-lagged Panel Model
- Qiaochu Zhang
Abstract
Despite the importance of attentional control deficits in the
development of anxiety symptoms, insufficient studies take a
developmental approach to understanding attentional control theory. The
study aimed to understand the reciprocal association between attentional
control and anxiety symptoms during transition into early adolescence.
Using the longitudinal design, the study recruited 321 Chinese children
from a primary school with the ages of 9 to 10 years. Children completed
inventories to measure attentional control difficulties and anxiety
symptoms three times with an interval of 6 months from Grades 3 to 5.
Random intercept cross-lagged panel model revealed that attentional
control difficulties did not predict the development of anxiety
symptoms, and anxiety symptoms did not predict the development of
attentional control difficulties from Wave 1 to Wave 2 and from Wave 2
to Wave 3. These findings casted doubt to attentional control theory in
the developmental context. Preventions that improve adolescents'
attentional control might not necessarily help reduce anxiety symptoms.