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. 2021 Sep 10;185:111256. doi: 10.1016/j.paid.2021.111256

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

The results of the simple slope analyses depicting the association between Time and Depression (left) and Anxiety (right) at different levels of Attachment anxiety for the longitudinal weekly data note. The main interaction effect for anxiety (SE = 0.002), t = 2.27, p = .020) was not significant at the alpha level of 0.0125 but shows a similar pattern as depression: the simple slopes analyses showed that individuals higher in attachment anxiety did not vary in their anxiety levels (B = 0.002 (SE = 0.01), t = −0.32) whereas individuals lower in anxiety reported a decrease in anxiety over the study period (B = −0.03 (SE = 0.01), t = −3.53).