“…withdrawal to emotion evocation correlate with symptoms of both internalizing and externalizing psychopathology (see Beauchaine, 2001Beauchaine, , 2012Porges, 2007;Vasilev, Crowell, Beauchaine, Mead, & GatzkeKopp, 2009), and with a wide range of psychopathological outcomes, including anxiety (e.g., Hastings et al, 2008;Kemp et al, 2014;Thayer, Friedman, & Borkovec, 1996), phobias (e.g., Å hs, Sollers, Furmark, Fredrikson, & Thayer, 2009), attention problems (see Rash & Aguirre-Camacho, 2012), autism (Neuhaus, Bernier, & Beauchaine, 2014;Patriquin, Scarpa, Friedman, & Porges, 2013), callousness (de Wied, van Boxtel, Matthys, & Meeus, 2012), conduct disorder Beauchaine, Katkin, Strassberg, & Snarr, 2001), depression (e.g., Rottenberg, 2007;Rottenberg, Salomon, Gross, & Gotlib, 2005;Rottenberg, Wilhelm, Gross, & Gotlib, 2002), nonsuicidal self-injury (Crowell et al, 2005), panic disorder (e.g., Asmundson & Stein, 1994), trait hostility (Sloan et al, 1994), psychopathy (Hansen, Johnsen, Thornton, Waage, & Thayer, 2007), and schizophrenia (Clamor, Lincoln, Thayer, & Koenig, in press). 5 Moreover, comorbid internalizing and externalizing symptoms predict greater RSA withdrawal to emotion evocation than either internalizing or externalizing symptoms alone (Calkins, Graziano, & Keane, 2007;Pang & Beauchaine, 2013).…”