Literature DB >> 28358557

Social anxiety is characterized by biased learning about performance and the self.

Leonie Koban1, Rebecca Schneider1, Yoni K Ashar1, Jessica R Andrews-Hanna1, Lauren Landy1, David A Moscovitch2, Tor D Wager1, Joanna J Arch3.   

Abstract

People learn about their self from social information, and recent work suggests that healthy adults show a positive bias for learning self-related information. In contrast, social anxiety disorder (SAD) is characterized by a negative view of the self, yet what causes and maintains this negative self-view is not well understood. Here the authors use a novel experimental paradigm and computational model to test the hypothesis that biased social learning regarding self-evaluation and self-feelings represents a core feature that distinguishes adults with SAD from healthy controls. Twenty-one adults with SAD and 35 healthy controls (HCs) performed a speech in front of 3 judges. They subsequently evaluated themselves and received performance feedback from the judges and then rated how they felt about themselves and the judges. Affective updating (i.e., change in feelings about the self over time, in response to feedback from the judges) was modeled using an adapted Rescorla-Wagner learning model. HCs demonstrated a positivity bias in affective updating, which was absent in SAD. Further, self-performance ratings revealed group differences in learning from positive feedback-a difference that endured at an average of 1 year follow up. These findings demonstrate the presence and long-term endurance of positively biased social learning about the self among healthy adults, a bias that is absent or reversed among socially anxious adults. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28358557      PMCID: PMC5623172          DOI: 10.1037/emo0000296

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Emotion        ISSN: 1528-3542


  68 in total

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10.  Depression is related to an absence of optimistically biased belief updating about future life events.

Authors:  C W Korn; T Sharot; H Walter; H R Heekeren; R J Dolan
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  17 in total

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Review 2.  What's in a word? How instructions, suggestions, and social information change pain and emotion.

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Review 5.  Ventral anterior cingulate cortex and social decision-making.

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Review 6.  The self in context: brain systems linking mental and physical health.

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7.  Improved Self-Esteem in Artists After Participating in the "Building Confidence and Self-Esteem Toolbox Workshop".

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Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-07-05

8.  Frontoparietal and Default Mode Network Contributions to Self-Referential Processing in Social Anxiety Disorder.

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9.  Change, stability, and instability in the Pavlovian guidance of behaviour from adolescence to young adulthood.

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10.  No Evidence for the Involvement of Cognitive Immunisation in Updating Beliefs About the Self in Three Non-Clinical Samples.

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Journal:  Cognit Ther Res       Date:  2021-07-30
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