Personalized Anxiety Insights
Interactive Network: Hover over symptoms to see details, click to explore connections
Individual SCARED Report: Exploring Your Unique Anxiety Profile
Understanding Group Anxiety Profile
What This Report Reveals
Your Anxiety Network Visualization
Key Findings: Anxiety Architecture
The following covers central players, connectors, and anxiety structures
The Central Players: Your Most Influential Symptoms
The symptoms listed below are the “hubs” of your anxiety network—they have the strongest connections to other symptoms and likely play a central role in your anxiety experience:
| Symptom | Degree | Betweenness | Closeness | Eigenvector | Composite |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| q18 | 0.875 | 0.037375 | 0.888889 | 0.227463 | 0.507182 |
| q1 | 0.800 | 0.028140 | 0.833333 | 0.212562 | 0.468509 |
| q7 | 0.750 | 0.025758 | 0.800000 | 0.198757 | 0.443629 |
| q14 | 0.750 | 0.032427 | 0.800000 | 0.190443 | 0.443218 |
| q36 | 0.725 | 0.013144 | 0.784314 | 0.205961 | 0.432105 |
What This Means: These symptoms are highly connected to others in your anxiety network. When these symptoms are present, they tend to activate or influence many other anxiety experiences. This suggests that addressing these central symptoms could have a broader impact on your overall anxiety.
The Connectors: Symptoms That Bridge Different Anxiety Types
Some symptoms act as “bridges” between different clusters of anxiety experiences:
| Symptom | Clusters Connected |
|---|---|
| q1 | 3 |
| q2 | 3 |
| q3 | 3 |
| q4 | 3 |
| q5 | 3 |
What This Means: These symptoms connect different types of anxiety experiences. They might represent common pathways that anxiety takes in your system, or they could be symptoms that appear across multiple anxiety contexts.
Your Anxiety Network Structure
Overall Network Characteristics
| Metric | Value | What This Tells Us |
|---|---|---|
| 41 Symptoms | 41.0000 | Comprehensive coverage of anxiety domains |
| 451 Connections | 451.0000 | High interconnectivity between symptoms |
| Density | 0.5500 | Moderate to high symptom clustering |
| Clustering | 0.6772 | Symptoms tend to group together |
| Communities | 2.0000 | Two main anxiety symptom clusters |
What These Numbers Mean
- High Density (0.55): Your anxiety symptoms are well-connected, suggesting that anxiety experiences tend to co-occur and influence each other.
- Strong Clustering (0.68): Symptoms group together, indicating that certain types of anxiety tend to happen together.
- Two Communities: Your anxiety symptoms organize into two main groups, suggesting two distinct anxiety patterns or domains.
Your Anxiety Symptom Clusters
Cluster 1: Core Anxiety Group
- Size: 17 symptoms
- Average Centrality: 0.528
- Characteristics: This cluster represents your primary anxiety symptoms, including q4, q3, q32, q8, q40, and others.
Cluster 2: Secondary Anxiety Group
- Size: 24 symptoms
- Average Centrality: 0.566
- Characteristics: This larger cluster includes symptoms like q23, q33, q31, q18, and q22, with slightly higher centrality scores.
Understanding Your Clusters: The fact that you have two distinct anxiety clusters suggests that your anxiety may manifest in different ways depending on the situation or context. Cluster 2’s higher centrality suggests these symptoms might be more influential in your overall anxiety pattern.
What This Means for You
Personalized Insights
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Target the Hubs: The symptoms with the highest centrality scores (q18, q1, q7, q14, q36) are likely your most impactful anxiety experiences. Addressing these could have the broadest positive effect.
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Understand the Connections: Your anxiety symptoms are highly interconnected, which means changes in one area could positively influence others.
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Cluster-Based Approach: Consider whether your anxiety tends to manifest in one cluster more than the other, as this could guide your intervention strategies.
Next Steps
- Discuss with Professionals: Share these findings with mental health professionals to develop targeted intervention strategies
- Monitor Patterns: Pay attention to which symptoms tend to appear together in your daily experience
- Track Progress: Use this baseline to measure how interventions affect your symptom network over time
Technical Details
Network analysis results saved with prefix: child_scared_network
This analysis uses advanced network science methods to map the relationships between your anxiety symptoms, providing insights that go beyond traditional assessment approaches.