Facial infrared thermography as an index of social anxiety.

Anxiety Stress Coping

Centro de Investigación Mente, Cerebro y Comportamiento, Universidad de Granada, Granada, Spain.

Published: January 2024

Previous research on physiological indices of social anxiety has offered unclear results. In this study, participants with low and high social anxiety performed five social interaction tasks while being recorded with a thermal camera. Each task was associated with a dimension assessed by the Social Anxiety Questionnaire for Adults (1 = Interactions with strangers. 2 = Speaking in public/Talking with people in authority, 3 = Criticism and embarrassment, 4 = Assertive expression of annoyance, disgust or displeasure, 5 = Interactions with the opposite sex). Mixed-effects models revealed that the temperature of the tip of the nose decreased significantly in participants with low (vs. high) social anxiety ( < 0.001), while no significant differences were found in other facial regions of interest: forehead ( = 0.999) and cheeks ( = 0.999). Furthermore, task 1 was the most effective at discriminating between the thermal change of the nose tip and social anxiety, with a trend for a higher nose temperature in participants with high social anxiety and a lower nose temperature for the low social anxiety group. We emphasize the importance of corroborating thermography with specific tasks as an ecological method, and tip of the nose thermal change as a psychophysiological index associated with social anxiety.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10615806.2023.2199209DOI Listing

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