Perception of control over anxiety mediates the relation between catastrophic thinking and social anxiety in social phobia |
| |
Authors: | Hofmann Stefan G |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Boston University, 648 Beacon Street, 6th Floor, Boston, MA 02215-2002, USA. shofmann@bu.edu |
| |
Abstract: | Cognitive models of social phobia (social anxiety disorder) assume that individuals with social phobia experience anxiety in social situations in part because they overestimate the social cost associated with a potentially negative outcome of a social interaction. Some emotion theorists, on the other hand, point to the perception of control over anxiety-related symptoms as a determinant of social anxiety. In order to examine the relationship between perceived emotional control (PEC), estimated social cost (ESC), and subjective anxiety, we compared three alternative structural equation models: Model 1 assumes that PEC and ESC independently predict social anxiety; Model 2 assumes that ESC partially mediates the relationship between PEC and anxiety, and Model 3 assumes that PEC partially mediates the relationship between ESC and anxiety. We recruited 144 participants with social phobia and administered self-report measures of estimated social cost, perceived anxiety control, and social anxiety. The results support Model 3 and suggest that "costly" social situations are anxiety provoking in part because social phobic individuals perceive their anxiety symptoms as being out of control. |
| |
Keywords: | Social anxiety disorder (social phobia) Emotional control Anxiety control Estimation of social cost Cognitive model Fear of fear |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|