Title of article
Cognitive processes in social anxiety: the effects of self-focus, rumination and anticipatory processing
Author/Authors
Tanna M. B. Mellings، نويسنده , , Lynn E. Alden، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages
15
From page
243
To page
257
Abstract
We examined three cognitive processes hypothesized to contribute to biases in judgments about and memory for social events: self-focused attention, post-event rumination, and anticipatory processing. Socially anxious (N=58) and nonanxious (N=58) subjects participated in a social interaction and then completed measures of self-focused attention and anxiety-related physiological sensations and behavior. The next day, subjects completed measures that assessed frequency of post-event processing and recall of the interaction. The results indicated that selective attention to negative self-related information led to biases in social judgments and recollections and that post-event processing contributed to the recall of negative self-related information. No evidence was found for selective retrieval of negative self-related information prior to a second social interaction. The results reconcile inconsistent previous findings related to memory bias in social anxiety.
Keywords
attention , cognitive , Social anxiety , memory , rumination , Self-focus
Journal title
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Serial Year
2000
Journal title
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Record number
569217
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