| Literature DB >> 24098566 |
Megan L Willis1, Helen F Dodd, Romina Palermo.
Abstract
The aim of the current study was to examine the relationship between individual differences in anxiety and the social judgements of trustworthiness and approachability. We assessed levels of state and trait anxiety in eighty-two participants who rated the trustworthiness and approachability of a series of unexpressive faces. Higher levels of trait anxiety (controlling for age, sex and state anxiety) were associated with the judgement of faces as less trustworthy. In contrast, there was no significant association between trait anxiety and judgements of approachability. These findings indicate that trait anxiety is a significant predictor of trustworthiness evaluations and illustrate the importance of considering the role of individual differences in the evaluation of trustworthiness. We propose that trait anxiety may be an important variable to control for in future studies assessing the cognitive and neural mechanisms underlying trustworthiness. This is likely to be particularly important for studies involving clinical populations who often experience atypical levels of anxiety.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24098566 PMCID: PMC3788768 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0076825
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Descriptive Statistics and Zero-order Correlations Between All Variables.
| Variable | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|
|
| 1. Approach | .18 | .91 | |||||
| 2. Trust | .65 | .07 | .80 | ||||
| 3. State Anxiety | −.21 | −.24 | 37.90 | 9.83 | |||
| 4. Trait Anxiety | −.15 | −.35 | .69 | 41.59 | 10.55 | ||
| 5. Sex | .21 | .15 | −.12 | −.11 | 1.27 | .45 | |
| 6. Age | .20 | .18 | −.20 | −.23 | .02 | 24.74 | 9.46 |
*p<.05, two-tailed.
**p<.005, two-tailed.
Figure 1Scatterplots showing the significant negative correlation between mean trustworthiness rating and trait anxiety (left) and the non-significant correlation between mean approachability rating and trait anxiety (right).
Regression Analyses Predicting Trustworthiness Judgements From Sex, Age, State Anxiety and Trait Anxiety.
| Predictors |
|
|
|
| Correlation | |
| Zero-order | Partial | |||||
| Constant | .647 | .569 | ||||
| Sex | .202 | .193 | .112 | 1.05 | .15 | .12 |
| Age | .006 | .009 | .075 | .69 | .15 | .08 |
| State Anxiety | .002 | .012 | .022 | .15 | −.24 | .02 |
| Trait Anxiety | −.025 | .011 | −.333 | −2.25 | −.35 | −.25 |
*p<.05, two-tailed.
**p<.005, two-tailed.
Regression Analyses Predicting Approachability Judgements From Sex, Age, State Anxiety and Trait Anxiety.
| Predictors |
|
|
|
| Correlation | |
| Zero-order | Partial | |||||
| Constant | −.189 | .658 | ||||
| Sex | .384 | .223 | .188 | 1.73 | .21 | .19 |
| Age | .016 | .011 | .165 | 1.48 | .20 | .17 |
| State Anxiety | −.017 | .014 | −.18 | −1.19 | −.21 | −.13 |
| Trait Anxiety | .003 | .013 | .033 | .22 | −.15 | .02 |
*p<.05, two-tailed.