# Emotion Regulation in Children and Adolescents with Social Anxiety Disorder: Differences in Strategy Use and Repertoire Compared to Specific Phobias and Healthy Controls

**Authors:** Antonia Ikas, Anna-Lina Rauschenbach, Vera Hauffe, Brunna Tuschen‑Caffier, Julian Schmitz

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s10802-025-01415-w · 2026-02-16

## TL;DR

Children and adolescents with social anxiety disorder use more maladaptive emotion regulation strategies compared to those with specific phobias or healthy controls.

## Contribution

The study identifies disorder-specific differences in emotion regulation strategy use and ratios in children and adolescents with social anxiety disorder.

## Key findings

- Children with SAD reported higher use of maladaptive strategies like giving up compared to other groups.
- SAD group showed lower use of adaptive strategies like problem-oriented action compared to controls.
- No differences in overall repertoire size, but SAD had a higher maladaptive-to-adaptive strategy ratio.

## Abstract

Both theoretical models and empirical evidence suggest that children and adolescents with social anxiety disorder (SAD) have difficulties with emotion regulation (ER), but little is known about which deficits are disorder-specific or involved across different anxiety disorders for this age group. Furthermore, the available repertoire of ER strategies as an important component of ER flexibility has so far received little attention in research on this age group. Self-reported use of individual ER strategies, the overall repertoire of used ER strategies, and the ratio of adaptive and maladaptive ER strategies were assessed in children and adolescents (aged 10–15 years) with SAD (n = 60), clinical controls with specific phobia (SP, n = 41), and healthy controls (HCs, n = 63) in a cross-sectional study. Children and adolescents with SAD reported using several maladaptive ER strategies (e.g., giving up) more frequently and several adaptive ER strategies (e.g., problem-oriented action) less frequently than both other groups. No group differences in the amount of used ER strategies (repertoire) were identified, but children and adolescents with SAD were found to report a higher ratio of maladaptive and a lower ratio of adaptive ER strategies compared to both other groups. Results suggest that the extent of emotion dysregulation varies with disorder severity, with deficits being more pronounced in children and adolescents with SAD. Potential approaches for SAD treatment, including a shift in repertoire ratios, are discussed.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** social anxiety disorder (MONDO:0001247), specific phobia (MONDO:0012000)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** EREG (epiregulin) [NCBI Gene 2069] {aka EPR, ER, Ep}
- **Diseases:** OCD (MESH:D009771), CDI (MESH:D003866), socially anxious (OMIM:300082), SAD (MESH:D000072861), Phobic fears (MESH:D010698), ER (MESH:C564833), developmental or neurological disorders (MESH:D009422), emotional and (MESH:D003072), internalizing symptoms (MESH:D000082122), problems (MESH:D019973), generalized anxiety disorder (MESH:C000726808), externalizing symptoms (MESH:D012816), ADHD (MESH:D001289), separation anxiety disorder (MESH:D001010), rumination (MESH:D000079562), ER difficulties (MESH:D051346), Anxiety Disorders (MESH:D001008), compulsory disorder (MESH:D009358), dysregulation (MESH:D021081), SP (MESH:C562465), autism spectrum disorder (MESH:D000067877), visual impairments (MESH:D014786), ODD (MESH:C563160), psychotic episode (MESH:C580065), Anxiety (MESH:D001007), oppositional defiant disorder (MESH:D019958), Mental Disorders (MESH:D001523)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12909415/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12909415