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Featured researches published by Anke W. Blöte.


Journal of Learning Disabilities | 1993

A Longitudinal Study on Dysgraphic Handwriting in Primary School

Lisa Hamstra-Bletz; Anke W. Blöte

In an epidemiological study, the scripts of 121 Dutch primary-school children were evaluated annually, starting in Grade 2. The children were followed for 5 years. An evaluation scale for childrens handwriting (the BHK scale) was used for rating the scripts on 13 characteristics and for measuring the speed of writing. Principal component analysis of the LONG matrix (in which the data collected on the five occasions are arranged beneath each other) yielded three clusters of items: (a) fine-motor ability, (b) structural performance, and (c) stylistic preference. It was found that the children with dysgraphic handwriting (10% scoring highest on the BHK quality items) had lower fine-motor ability and, in the higher grades, showed less preference for a personal style. Their structural performance also was poorer than that of the other writers. Children with and without dysgraphic handwriting did not differ in writing speed. Some implications of the study for handwriting instruction are discussed.


Journal of Anxiety Disorders | 2008

Interpretation bias and social anxiety in adolescents

Anne C. Miers; Anke W. Blöte; Susan M. Bögels; P. Michiel Westenberg

Interpretation bias, described as the tendency to interpret social situations in a negative or threatening manner, has been widely linked to social anxiety in adult populations. This study aimed to extend research on interpretation bias to an adolescent population. Thirty-seven high socially anxious and a control group of 36 non-socially anxious adolescents rated the likelihood of different interpretations of ambiguous social and non-social situations coming to mind and which interpretation they most believed. Results showed that negative interpretations of social situations were more common in the high anxious than control group. Such negative bias could not be accounted for by high levels of negative affect. The groups did not differ as to their positive interpretations. Furthermore, there was evidence for content specificity of interpretation bias; high anxious adolescents were not more negative than control participants in their interpretations of non-social situations. Findings are discussed in relation to the adult literature and their clinical relevance is considered.


Perceptual and Motor Skills | 1990

Development of Handwriting in Primary School: A Longitudinal Study

Lisa Hamstra-Bletz; Anke W. Blöte

To investigate the development of handwriting in primary school children a study was conducted in which the scripts of 127 pupils were rated yearly, starting in Grade 2. Children were followed-up on for 3, 4, or 5 yr. The BHK-scale for childrens handwriting was used for rating the scripts on 13 characteristics and for measuring the speed of writing. The shifts in frequency of occurrence of the various characteristics over time were analyzed using Correspondence Analysis. A one-dimensional solution was chosen, yielding a time dimension. Results were interpreted in terms of (a) childrens growing motor ability, (b) a deterioration of the form aspects of the script as they had initially learned those, and (c) the development of a personal writing style with regard to esthetic aspects. A strong relation was found between the speed of writing and grade.


Biological Psychology | 2009

A prepared speech in front of a pre-recorded audience: Subjective, physiological, and neuroendocrine responses to the Leiden Public Speaking Task

P. Michiel Westenberg; Caroline L. Bokhorst; Anne C. Miers; Sindy R. Sumter; Victor L. Kallen; Johannes van Pelt; Anke W. Blöte

This study describes a new public speaking protocol for youth. The main question asked whether a speech prepared at home and given in front of a pre-recorded audience creates a condition of social-evaluative threat. Findings showed that, on average, this task elicits a moderate stress response in a community sample of 83 12- to 15-year-old adolescents. During the speech, participants reported feeling more nervous and having higher heart rate and sweatiness of the hands than at baseline or recovery. Likewise, physiological (heart rate and skin conductance) and neuroendocrine (cortisol) activity were higher during the speech than at baseline or recovery. Additionally, an anticipation effect was observed: baseline levels were higher than recovery levels for most variables. Taking the anticipation and speech response together, a substantial cortisol response was observed for 55% of participants. The findings indicate that the Leiden Public Speaking Task might be particularly suited to investigate individual differences in sensitivity to social-evaluative situations.


Perceptual and Motor Skills | 1991

A Longitudinal Study on the Structure of Handwriting

Anke W. Blöte; Lisa Hamstra-Bletz

In this study the structure of handwriting was investigated longitudinally, across grades. The scripts of 63 primary school children were evaluated annually, starting in Grade 2. Children were followed for 5 years. An evaluation scale for childrens handwriting (the BHK-scale) was used to rate the scripts on 13 characteristics and to measure the speed of writing. Principal component analysis of the BROAD matrix (in which the data collected on the five occasions are arranged side by side) showed that the structure of handwriting characteristics is very stable over these years. Principal component analysis of the LONG matrix (in which the data collected on the five occasions are arranged beneath each other) yielded three clusters of items, which concern (a) fine motor ability of the children, (b) structural performance, and (c) stylistic preference. Sex, grade, and writing speed were related to this structure. In yet another approach a principal component analysis was performed on the within-group correlation matrix of the different grades. In this way the effect of differences in means between grades was removed from the analysis. Three principal components emerged, which, after varimax rotation, correspond to the three clusters noted in the principal component analysis of the LONG matrix.


Journal of Anxiety Disorders | 2014

Developmental pathways of social avoidance across adolescence: The role of social anxiety and negative cognition☆

Anne C. Miers; Anke W. Blöte; David Heyne; P. Michiel Westenberg

It is argued that the adolescent onset of social anxiety disorder (SAD) may be partly attributable to an increase in avoidance of social situations across this period. The current cohort-sequential study investigated developmental pathways of social avoidance in adolescence and examined the explanatory role of social anxiety and negative cognitive processes. A community sample of youth (9-21 years, N=331) participated in a four-wave study. Trajectory analyses revealed two pathways: an increased avoidance pathway and a low avoidance pathway. The pathways were hardly distinguishable at age 9 and they steadily diverged across adolescence. Logistic regression analyses showed that social anxiety and post-event rumination were significantly related to the increased avoidance pathway; anticipatory processing and self-focused attention were not. The findings suggest that adolescence is a key developmental period for the progression of social avoidance among youth who show relatively high levels of social anxiety and post-event rumination.


Journal of Child and Family Studies | 2011

Negative Social Cognitions in Socially Anxious Youth: Distorted Reality or a Kernel of Truth?

Anne C. Miers; Anke W. Blöte; P. Michiel Westenberg

We review studies that investigate negative social cognitions of socially anxious youth in relation to two specific domains: interpretation of ambiguous social situations and self-evaluation of social performance, including social skills and nervous behaviors. In this review, we address the question whether socially anxious youth’s negative perceptions are distortions of reality or reflect a kernel of truth as compared to other sources of information including independent adult observers and age peers. Studies key to this question are those that investigate not only the social perceptions themselves but also the social behavior of socially anxious youth. Hence the selection of studies for the review was based on this criterion. From the relevant literature it is, as yet, unclear whether the negative interpretations of ambiguous social situations shown by socially anxious youth are distorted or a reflection of reality. Socially anxious youth’s self-evaluations of social skills appear partly distorted and partly true, depending on the person judging the social skills. In contrast, self-evaluations of nervous behaviors appear distorted. The studies reviewed indicate that research would benefit from including a wider range of perceptions from persons relevant to the socially anxious youth’s daily social environment, not only parents and teachers but also their age peers.


Journal of Experimental Psychopathology | 2011

Subjective and objective arousal correspondence and the role of self-monitoring processes in high and low socially anxious youth

Anne C. Miers; Anke W. Blöte; Sindy R. Sumter; V.L. Kallen; P.M. Westenberg

Previous research found weak correspondence between subjective and objective arousal measures during social-evaluative tasks, particularly in high socially anxious individuals. This study evaluated subjective-objective correspondence in high versus low socially anxious youth (9–17 years). Sixty-six high (HSA; 38 boys and 28 girls) and 61 low (LSA; 37 boys and 24 girls) socially anxious youth participated in a speech task, with a moderately (pre-speech), high (speech), and low anxious (recovery) phase. Subjective experience of nervousness, heart rate and sweaty palms were measured along with salivary cortisol, actual heart rate, and skin conductance. Participants also completed questionnaires measuring 3 self-monitoring variables; self-focused attention, emotional awareness, and negative thoughts. Results showed that HSA participants had exaggerated perceptions of their physiological arousal. However, they did not have weaker subjective-objective correspondence than LSA participants. Correspondence was rather low in both groups. Finally, inclusion of the self-monitoring variables improved the prediction of subjectively experienced arousal in both groups.


British Journal of Development Psychology | 2004

Discovery and maintenance of the many‐to‐one counting strategy in 4‐year‐olds: A microgenetic study

Anke W. Blöte; Sandra G. van Otterloo; Claire E. Stevenson; Marcel V. J. Veenman

This study investigated the development of the many-to-one counting strategy in 4- year-old children. In the first experiment, 52 children participated. Their development with respect to two kinds of tasks, a hidden-items task and a needed-items task, was studied over four sessions. Children (n = 28) who accurately used the many-to-one strategy in Session 4 also participated in the second experiment. These children were presented with more difficult hidden- and needed-items tasks. It was found that children often produced the strategy for the first time on tasks with relatively few items. Most children then kept producing it, even if they initially did not obtain much profit from its use because of counting errors. Increasing task difficulty resulted in children making more counting errors or reverting to invalid strategies depending on the nature of the new task.


Archive | 2015

Social Anxiety and the School Environment of Adolescents

Anke W. Blöte; Anne C. Miers; David Heyne; P. Michiel Westenberg

Adolescents spend a great deal of their daily life at school, necessitating a considerable amount of social interaction. For the socially anxious adolescent, the school environment presents many potentially stressful situations such as giving an oral presentation, answering questions in class, making friends, and participating in groups. In these situations, they may be ridiculed, excluded, or even victimized. The socially anxious student may stop socializing with classmates and friends, stop attending certain classes, or even refuse to attend school altogether. The first part of this chapter describes how social anxiety manifests itself in the school setting. We review situations which are distressful for and even avoided by socially anxious students. An extreme consequence of this distress and avoidance, school refusal, is also discussed. In the second part of the chapter, we describe the way in which socially anxious students’ behavior, and the behavior of their classmates or peers, may contribute to the difficulty that socially anxious students experience at school. In addition to these behavioral and interpersonal factors, we consider the negative social cognitions of socially anxious students. Finally, we offer suggestions for intervention and future research. Because socially anxious students are trapped in a vicious cycle of social anxiety, negative expectations about their social performance, and negative peer responses, it is a complex task to break this vicious cycle. Effective interventions should address a variety of factors, notably negative thinking, poor social skills and as perhaps also physical appearance features.

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