Social anxiety
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Social anxiety is the anxiety and fear specifically linked to being in social settings (i.e., interacting with others).
Disorder
Social anxiety disorder (SAD), also known as social phobia, is an anxiety disorder characterized by a significant amount of fear in one or more social situations causing considerable distress and impaired ability to function in at least some parts of daily life.[5]: 15 These fears can be triggered by perceived or actual scrutiny from others. Social anxiety disorder affects 8% of women and 6.1% of men.[6] In the United States, anxiety disorders are the most common mental illness. They affect 40 million adults, ages 18 and older. Anxiety can come in different forms and panic attacks can lead to panic disorders which is the recurrence of unexpected panic attacks.[7] Other related anxiety disorders include social anxiety disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), various types of phobias, and post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).[8] Fortunately, it is highly treatable and not everyone needs the treatment.
Physical symptoms often include excessive
Stages
Child development
Some feelings of anxiety in social situations are normal and necessary for effective
Adults
It can be easier to identify social anxiety within adults because they tend to shy away from any social situation and keep to themselves. Common adult forms of social anxiety include
Criteria that distinguish between
Signs and symptoms
Attention bias
Individuals who tend to experience more social anxiety turn their attention away from threatening social information and toward themselves, prohibiting themselves from challenging negative expectations about others and maintaining high levels of social anxiety.[21] For example, a socially anxious individual may perceive rejection from a conversational partner, turn their attention away, and never learn that the individual is actually welcoming.[22] Individuals who are high in social anxiety tend to show increased initial attention toward negative social cues, such as threatening faces, followed by attention away from these social cues, indicating a pattern of hypervigilance followed by avoidance.[22][23] Attention in social anxiety has been measured using the dot-probe paradigm, which presents two faces next to one another. One face has an emotional expression and the other has a neutral expression, and when the faces disappear, a probe appears in the location of one of the faces. This creates a congruent condition in which the probe appears in the same location as the emotional face and an incongruent condition. Participants respond to the probe by pressing a button and differences in reaction times reveal attentional biases. This task has produced mixed results, with some studies finding no differences between socially-anxious individuals and controls, some studies finding avoidance of all faces by socially-anxious individuals, and other studies finding vigilance by socially-anxious individuals only toward threat faces.[22] The Face-in-the-crowd task shows that individuals with social anxiety are faster at detecting an angry face in a predominantly neutral or positive crowd or slower at detecting happy faces than a non-anxious person.[22]
Focus on the
Basic science research suggests that cognitive biases can be modified. Attention bias modification training has been shown to temporarily impact social anxiety.[25]
Triggers and behaviors
Triggers are sets of events or actions that can remind someone of a previous trauma or feared consequence. Exposure to a trigger could lead a person to have an emotional or physical reaction. Individuals could also have behavioral changes, such as avoiding public places or situations that might direct excessive focus and attention toward them, such as public speaking or talking to new people.[26] They also may not participate in certain activities for fear of embarrassment, which can lead to isolation. For someone who has social anxiety, this could lead them to have a panic attack. There are many negative side effects that can come from social anxiety if untreated, such as low self-esteem, trouble being assertive, hypersensitivity to criticism, poor social skills, becoming isolated, having difficulties with social relationships, low academic and employment achievements, substance abuse, and suicidal thoughts or attempts.[26] Safety behaviors often involve avoidance of the trigger itself or of perceived threats when exposed to the trigger. For example, once in a feared social situation, a socially-anxious individual may avoid eye contact, speaking to strangers, or eating in front of others.[27] Safety behaviors meant to make an individual feel safer have been found to most often enforce or validate anxious feelings, thus leading to a cycle in which the safety behavior is thought to be needed and the trigger's perceived threat is never challenged.[27]
Measures and treatment
Trait social anxiety is most commonly measured by self-report.[28] This method possesses limitations, but subjective responses are the most reliable indicator of a subjective state. Other measures of social anxiety include diagnostic interviews, clinician-administered instruments, and behavioral assessments.[29] No single trait social anxiety self-report measure shows all psychometric properties, including different kinds of validity (content validity, criterion validity, construct validity), reliability, and internal consistency.[28] The SIAS along with the SIAS-6A and -6B are rated as the best.[28] These measures include:
- Fear of Negative Evaluation (FNE) and Brief form (BFNE)[30]
- Fear Questionnaire Social Phobic Subscale (FQSP)[31]
- Interaction Anxiousness Scale (IAS)[32]
- Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale--Self Report (LSAS-SR)[33]
- Older Adult Social-Evaluative Situations (OASES)[34]
- Social Avoidance and Distress (SAD)[35]
- Self-Consciousness Scale (SCS)[36]
- Social Interaction Anxiety Scale (SIAS)[37] and brief form (SIAS-6A and -6B)
- Social Interaction Phobia Scale (SIPS)[37]
- Social Phobia and Anxiety Inventory (SPAI)[38] and brief form (SPAI-23)
- Situational Social Avoidance (SSA)[39]
Many types of treatments are available for
Development and evolutionary theories
Social development in childhood
Fearful temperament and either underdeveloped social skills or excessive socialization of a child can cause the child to become hyper-aware of inappropriate social situations.[43] Additional factors in upbringing which can increase the likelihood of a child to develop social anxiety include overprotection by parents, lack of an emotionally expressive home environment, and observation of other people's social fears or mistakes.[44]
Sensory processing sensitivity
Sensory processing sensitivity (SPS) is a temperamental or personality trait involving "an increased sensitivity of the central nervous system and a deeper cognitive processing of physical, social and emotional stimuli". The trait is characterized by "a tendency to 'pause to check' in novel situations, greater sensitivity to subtle stimuli, and the engagement of deeper cognitive processing strategies for employing coping actions, all of which is driven by heightened emotional reactivity, both positive and negative". Genetic inheritance of a high level of sensory processing sensitivity may increase an individual's awareness of social situations and their potential consequences.[45]
Biological adaptation to living in small groups
There is a suggestion that people have adapted to live with others in small groups. Living in a group is attractive to humans as there are more people to provide labor and protection, and there is a concentration of potential mates.[46][47] Any perceived threat to group resources should leave an individual on guard, as should any potential position of status that might bring conflict with others.[48] In effect, anxiety is adaptive because it helps people understand what is socially acceptable and what is not. The threat of exclusion from resources could lead to death.
Much of evolutionary theory is concerned with reproduction, so exposure to potential mates within a group is an evolutionary benefit.[48] Finally, at a basic level, being confined to a particular group of people limits exposure to certain diseases.[47] Studies have suggested that social affiliation has an impact on health, and, the more integrated and accepted we are, the healthier we are.[49][46][48] All of these factors are evolutionary primers for humans to be sensitive to social situations and their potential consequences.
Exclusion theory
At its simplest, social anxiety might come from as a basic human need to 'fit into' a given social group.[46][50] Someone might be excluded due to their inability to contribute to a group, deviance from group standards, or even unattractiveness. Due to the benefits of living in a group, an individual would want to avoid social isolation at any cost. Knowing what is and is not seen as attractive to others allows individuals to anticipate and prevent rejection, criticisms, or exclusion by others.[48] Humans are physiologically sensitive to social cues and therefore detect changes in interactions which may indicate dissatisfaction or unpleasant reactions.[48] Overall, social anxiety may serve as a way for people to avoid certain actions that might bring anticipated social exclusion.[46]
See also
- Alexithymia
- Agoraphobia
- Asociality
- Bullying
- Autism)
- Avoidant personality disorder
- Competition
- Emotional labor
- Emotion work
- Evaluation
- Harassment
- Highly sensitive person
- Identity performance
- Keeping up with the Joneses
- Major depressive disorder
- Obsessive-compulsive disorder
- Peer pressure
- Productivism
- Rat race
- Schizoid personality disorder
- Selective mutism
- Shame
- Social determinants of health
- Social determinants of health in poverty
- Social determinants of mental health
- Social inhibition
- Social isolation
- Social rejection
- Social stress
- Toxic workplace
- Workplace harassment
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