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Cultural mediators of self-reported social anxiety
Authors:Hong Janie J  Woody Sheila R
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada. jjhong@stanford.edu
Abstract:East Asians generally endorse higher social anxiety than do Westerners. Widely used measures of social anxiety, however, may not account for different social values across cultures. Drawing from Korean (n=251) and Euro-Canadian (n=250) community samples, this study used a cross-sectional design to examine the relationship between ratings of social anxiety and beliefs and self-views typically found in East Asian cultures. Results indicated that independent self-construal and identity consistency, views of the self that are typically associated with Western cultures, fully mediate the ethnic difference on self-reported social anxiety. Moreover, two indicators of East Asian views of the self in social contexts (interdependent self-construal and self-criticism) were partial mediators. Overall, the data suggest conceptualizations of pathological social anxiety may need to be revised to be useful for studying individuals in East Asian cultures.
Keywords:Social anxiety   Social phobia   Self-construal   Self-criticism   Identity consistency   East Asians
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