University of Maryland at College Park.
University of Maryland at College Park.
Behav Ther. 2022 Nov;53(6):1109-1121. doi: 10.1016/j.beth.2022.04.011. Epub 2022 May 2.
Adolescents with elevated social anxiety commonly experience peer-related impairments - particularly with same-age, unfamiliar peers - stemming from their avoidant behaviors. Yet, peer-related impairments are not unique to social anxiety. For example, adolescents who experience social anxiety may also experience symptoms of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), which also increase risk for peer-related impairments. Relative to social anxiety, peer-related impairments linked to ADHD symptoms more likely stem from hyperactivity (i.e., approach behaviors). These distinct pathways point to adolescents with elevated social anxiety and ADHD symptoms (i.e., social anxiety + ADHD) experiencing particularly high peer-related impairments, which commonly manifest as behavioral displays of low social skills when interacting with unfamiliar peers. We tested this notion in a mixed-clinical/community sample of 134 14- to 15-year-old adolescents and their parents. Adolescents participated in a series of social interaction tasks designed to simulate how adolescents interact with same-age, unfamiliar peers. Trained observers independently rated adolescents on observed social skills within these interactions. Both parents and adolescents completed parallel surveys of social anxiety and ADHD symptoms, which we used to identify social anxiety + ADHD adolescents as well as other combinations of social anxiety and ADHD symptoms (i.e., neither, elevated on one but not the other). Adolescents with social anxiety + ADHD displayed significantly lower social skills, relative to all other groups. Among adolescents, social anxiety + ADHD may have a compounding effect on social skills. As such, therapists working with social anxiety + ADHD adolescents should probe for peer-related impairments and factors implicated in the development and maintenance of these impairments.
患有社交焦虑症的青少年通常会经历与同龄人相关的障碍,尤其是与年龄相仿、不熟悉的同龄人交往时,这主要源于他们的回避行为。然而,与同龄人相关的障碍并非社交焦虑所特有。例如,患有社交焦虑症的青少年也可能会出现注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)的症状,这也增加了与同龄人相关障碍的风险。与社交焦虑症相比,与 ADHD 症状相关的与同龄人相关的障碍更可能源于多动(即,接近行为)。这些不同的途径表明,患有社交焦虑症和 ADHD 症状的青少年(即社交焦虑症+ADHD)经历了特别高的与同龄人相关的障碍,这些障碍通常表现为与不熟悉的同龄人互动时社交技能低下的行为表现。我们在一个混合临床/社区的 134 名 14 至 15 岁青少年及其父母的样本中测试了这一观点。青少年参与了一系列旨在模拟青少年与年龄相仿、不熟悉的同龄人互动的社交互动任务。经过培训的观察者独立地对青少年在这些互动中的观察到的社交技能进行评分。父母和青少年都完成了社交焦虑症和 ADHD 症状的平行调查,我们使用这些调查来识别社交焦虑症+ADHD 青少年以及其他社交焦虑症和 ADHD 症状的组合(即,既不升高,也不升高)。患有社交焦虑症+ADHD 的青少年的社交技能明显低于其他所有群体。在青少年中,社交焦虑症+ADHD 可能对社交技能产生叠加效应。因此,与社交焦虑症+ADHD 青少年一起工作的治疗师应该探查与同龄人相关的障碍以及这些障碍发展和维持的相关因素。