Study Identifies Key Risk Factors

Researchers at the University of Edinburgh discovered that low self-esteem and parental mental health are the strongest predictors of anxiety and depression in teens building attention skills—not the attention challenges themselves. When teens internalize struggle as personal failure, their self-worth takes a hit that can quickly spiral into anxiety or low mood.

The study found a “snowball effect” at work: attention-related struggles in school or social settings erode a teen’s belief in their own capabilities. When they feel they’re “failing” at daily tasks, that low self-worth becomes a direct bridge to emotional difficulties.