Social anxiety and interpretation bias: examining clinical and subclinical components in adolescents.

Child Adolesc Ment Health

Leiden University, Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Institute of Psychology, Unit Developmental and Educational Psychology, The Netherlands.

Published: September 2018

Background: This study aimed to examine whether different components of interpretation bias are clinical or dimensional features of adolescent social anxiety. The study analyzed the components of this bias at a subclinical level of Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) and compared these with a clinical sample of adolescents with SAD.

Method: Adolescents in the age range 13-17 years participated. A group with SAD (n = 30) was compared with a group with subclinical SAD (n = 60), and a non-socially anxious group (n = 95).

Results: Negative interpretation bias for social situations was found to be a dimensional aspect of social anxiety. In contrast, belief in negative interpretations of social situations appears to be a clinical feature. Contrary to expectations, endorsement of positive interpretations did not differ between the three groups.

Conclusions: The results suggest that a screening instrument based on negative interpretations of social situations could be useful to detect adolescents at-risk of developing SAD. In a clinical setting, the belief in negative interpretations and the presence of the bias in nonsocial situations should also be considered.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/camh.12221DOI Listing

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