All anxiety is not created equal, and a research team at the University of Illinois now has the data to prove it. The team has found compelling evidence that differing patterns of brain activity are associated with each of two types of anxiety: anxious apprehension (verbal rumination, worry) and anxious arousal (intense fear, panic, or both).
Their work appears this month online in Psychophysiology. [press release from UIUC]
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Brain Activity Reflects Differences in Types of Anxiety
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