Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7249519 | Personality and Individual Differences | 2017 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Evolutionary models highlight the centrality of the social-rank system in social anxiety (SA). Cognitive models emphasize the role of low self-evaluations (SEs) in the etiology and maintenance of SA. Based on these models, we predicted that explicit and implicit social-rank SEs are negatively associated with SA-severity. Consistent with previous findings, we also expected the negative association between SA-severity and implicit social-rank SEs to be intensified by low levels of explicit social-rank SEs. Participants (NÂ =Â 216) performed social-rank and affiliation versions of the Self Implicit Association Test (Greenwald & Farnham, 2000) to assess implicit SEs. Next, they rated themselves on traits concerning social-rank and affiliation to assess explicit SEs. We found that SA-severity is associated with explicit social-rank SEs, above and beyond the effects of self-esteem, depression-severity, and affiliation SEs. Moreover, SA-severity was further associated with the inter-relationship between explicit and implicit social-rank SEs: At low levels of explicit SEs, implicit SEs are negatively related to SA-severity, whereas this association did not hold at high levels of explicit SEs. These findings extend and refine cognitive theories in highlighting the importance of social-rank SEs in SA. The role of understanding the multifaceted structure of the self in conceptualizing SA is underlined.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Neuroscience
Behavioral Neuroscience
Authors
Uri Berger, Hadar Keshet, Eva Gilboa-Schechtman,