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REGULAR PAPERS

On the relationship between temperament, metacognition, and anxiety: independent and mediated effects

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Pages 697-709 | Received 16 Mar 2011, Accepted 03 Oct 2011, Published online: 17 Nov 2011
 

Abstract

The present study examined the relations between temperamental traits distinguished in regulative theory of temperament, state anxiety, and metacognition as postulated in self-regulatory executive function (S-REF) theory of emotional disorder. Data analysis (n=315) consisted of independent and mediated effect analyses. Of the six traits, briskness, emotional reactivity and perseveration correlated significantly with both state anxiety and metacognitions (emotional reactivity and perseveration correlated positively, and briskness – negatively). These traits were predictors of state anxiety. Metacognition predicted state anxiety and relationships were independent of temperament. A mediating effect of metacognition was confirmed for the general index as well as negative and positive belief subscales. The findings support the metacognitive model of psychopathology and suggest that temperament is associated with metacognitions implicated in psychopathology and may have both direct and metacognitively mediated effects on anxiety.

Acknowledgement

This study was funded by grant no. BST 154543 from the Faculty of Psychology, University of Warsaw.

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