Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
902002 Behaviour Research and Therapy 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Models of social phobia highlight the importance of anticipatory anxiety in the experience of fear during a social situation. Anticipatory anxiety has been shown to be highly correlated with performance anxiety for a variety of social situations. A few studies show that average ratings of anxiety during the anticipation and performance phases of a social situation decline following treatment. Evidence also suggests that the point of confrontation with the feared stimulus is the peak level of fear. No study to date has evaluated the pattern of anxious responding across the anticipation, confrontation, and performance phases before and after treatment, which is the focus of the current study. Socially phobic individuals (N = 51) completed a behavioral avoidance task before and after two types of manualized cognitive behavioral therapy, and gave ratings of fear during the anticipation and performance phases.Results from latent growth curve analysis were the same for the two treatments and suggested that before treatment, anxiety sharply increased during the anticipation phase, was highly elevated at the confrontation, and gradually increased during the performance phase. After treatment, anxiety increased during the anticipation phase, although at a much slower rate than at pretreatment, peaked at confrontation, and declined during the performance phase. The findings suggest that anticipatory experiences are critical to the experience of fear for public speaking and should be incorporated into exposures.

► Fear increased during the anticipation phase and peaked during confrontation prior to treatment. ► Feared remained at an elevated level during the speech prior to treatment. ► Fear increased to a lesser extent during anticipation after treatment. ► Fear peaked during confrontation after treatment. ► Fear decreased during performance after treatment.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Psychiatry and Mental Health
Authors
, ,