| Literature DB >> 35250098 |
Abbas Abdollahi1, Alim Al Ayub Ahmed2, Wanich Suksatan3, Tribhuwan Kumar4, Mohammed Sabeeh Majeed5, Anna Gustina Zainal6, Farimah Dokoushkani7, Kelly A Allen8.
Abstract
Social anxiety is one of the most prevalent and chronic mental-health conditions in young adults. To date, no studies have been conducted about the relationships between the Big Five personality dimensions, courage, and social anxiety among Malaysian undergraduate students. Therefore, this study was designed to examine courage as a potential mediator of the association between the Big Five personality dimensions and social anxiety among Malaysian Undergraduates. In this study, 500 Malaysian undergraduate students (205 males and 295 females) completed a series of questionnaires. Structural equation modelling (AMOS-SEM) revealed that, of the Big Five, neuroticism and social anxiety were positively correlated. Extraversion, conscientiousness, openness to experience, and agreeableness, as well as courage, were negatively correlated with social anxiety. Courage mediated the relationship between the Big Five personality dimensions and social anxiety. The main contribution of the present research is to show how the Big Five personality dimensions may contribute to social anxiety. The findings of this study also could be implicated for counselling practice for undergraduate students in Malaysia as a collectivist setting and other collectivist settings around the world. © National Academy of Psychology (NAOP) India 2022.Entities:
Keywords: Big Five personality dimensions; Courage; Social anxiety; Undergraduates
Year: 2022 PMID: 35250098 PMCID: PMC8886862 DOI: 10.1007/s12646-022-00641-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Stud (Mysore) ISSN: 0033-2968
Correlations between study variables, means, SDs, and actual ranges
| Variables | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Social anxiety | 1 | .56** | − .48** | − .47** | − .53** | − .57** | − .68** |
| (2) Neuroticism | 1 | − .38** | − .32** | − .39** | − .36* | − .42** | |
| (3) Conscientiousness | 1 | .42** | .31** | .41** | .38** | ||
| (4) Agreeableness | 1 | .41** | .47** | .41** | |||
| (5) Openness to Experience | 1 | .57** | .55** | ||||
| (6) Extraversion | 1 | .63** | |||||
| (7) Courage | 1 | ||||||
| 78 | 19.62 | 27.13 | 23.27 | 31.43 | 29.87 | 20.58 | |
| SD | 16.21 | 3.14 | 5.77 | 4.52 | 5.36 | 4.68 | 5.14 |
| Actual range | 10–126 | 0–42 | 9–55 | 10–58 | 10–60 | 10–60 | 6–38 |
**p < .001
Fig. 1Structural model for the social anxiety in undergraduate students. All pathways were significant with p < 0.01
Fig. 2Indirect model, in which the beta coefficients for the direct mode’s paths are in parentheses. All pathways were significant with p < 0.01