Hope D A, Heimberg R G
Center for Stress and Anxiety Disorders, State University of New York, Albany.
J Pers Assess. 1988 Winter;52(4):626-39. doi: 10.1207/s15327752jpa5204_3.
The relationship between public and private self-consciousness and self-report questionnaires, clinician ratings, and various measures derived from an individualized simulation of an anxiety-provoking situation was examined in a sample of men and women seeking treatment for social phobia. As predicted, public, not private, self-consciousness was generally related to self-report and naive observer ratings of anxiety and to behavioral disruption during the simulation. The predicted relationship between public self-consciousness and how accurately subjects evaluated their performance in the anxiety-provoking situation was marginally supported. Hypotheses regarding the relationship between private self-consciousness and self-reported anxiety during an anxiety-provoking situation, and between private self-consciousness and the correspondence between physiological assessment and self-report, were not supported. The discussion focuses on methodological issues and the theoretical implications of the relationship between self-consciousness and social anxiety.
在寻求社交恐惧症治疗的男性和女性样本中,研究了公众自我意识和私人自我意识与自我报告问卷、临床医生评分以及从引发焦虑情境的个性化模拟中得出的各种测量方法之间的关系。正如预测的那样,公众自我意识而非私人自我意识通常与焦虑的自我报告和天真观察者评分以及模拟过程中的行为干扰有关。公众自我意识与受试者在引发焦虑情境中评估自身表现的准确程度之间的预测关系得到了微弱支持。关于私人自我意识与引发焦虑情境中自我报告的焦虑之间的关系,以及私人自我意识与生理评估和自我报告之间的对应关系的假设未得到支持。讨论集中在方法学问题以及自我意识与社交焦虑之间关系的理论意义上。