Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7252338 | Personality and Individual Differences | 2014 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Sex differences between men and women in social anxiety are largely unexplored. This study sought to shed some light on this topic. We administered self-report measures of social anxiety to community samples of 17,672 women and 13,440 men from 16 Latin American countries, Spain and Portugal, as well as to a clinical sample of 601 patients diagnosed with social anxiety disorder. Small but significant differences were found between men and women in the general degree of social anxiety and self-reported fears of interactions with the opposite sex, criticism and embarrassment, and speaking in public-talking to people in authority. These results point to small, but meaningful differences between men and women in social anxiety. Implications of these results for the self-report measurement of social anxiety in men and women are discussed.
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Authors
Vicente E. Caballo, Isabel C. Salazar, MarÃa Jesús Irurtia, Benito Arias, Stefan G. Hofmann, CISO-A Research Team CISO-A Research Team,