| Literature DB >> 27660700 |
Lauren K Canvin1, Magdalena Janecka1, David M Clark1.
Abstract
Patients with Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) often report elevated levels of self-focussed evaluative attention (SFEA), and seem excessively concerned with being observed by others. This study tested whether SFEA increases the perception of being observed by others. A sample of 52 high and 52 low socially anxious participants estimated the percentage of people 'looking at you' in several matrices of faces. A control task used matrices of clocks. SFEA was manipulated. As predicted, increasing SFEA led to significantly higher estimates of people 'looking at you' in both groups. Estimates on the control task were not affected by SFEA, thus the effects appear specific to social stimuli. These findings suggest that the increased levels of SFEA that characterise patients with SAD could contribute to their enhanced perception of being observed by others. The findings have implications for the role of attention training in the treatment of SAD.Entities:
Keywords: cognitive model; perception of being observed; self-focussed attention; self-focussed evaluative attention; social anxiety; social phobia
Year: 2016 PMID: 27660700 PMCID: PMC5029547 DOI: 10.5127/jep.047315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Psychopathol ISSN: 2043-8087