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Justin W. Weeks

Researcher at Ohio University

Publications -  65
Citations -  3342

Justin W. Weeks is an academic researcher from Ohio University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social anxiety & Anxiety. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 64 publications receiving 2804 citations. Previous affiliations of Justin W. Weeks include Temple University.

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Empirical validation and psychometric evaluation of the Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation Scale in patients with social anxiety disorder.

TL;DR: Standard scoring of the BFNE may not be optimal for patients with social anxiety disorder, and confirmatory factor analysis indicated a 2-factor solution to be more appropriate.
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The Fear of Positive Evaluation Scale: Assessing a proposed cognitive component of social anxiety

TL;DR: Preliminary support is provided for the psychometric properties of the FPES and the validity of the construct of FPE.
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Exploring the relationship between fear of positive evaluation and social anxiety.

TL;DR: Several studies conducted for the purpose of extending the empirical examination of the construct of fear of positive evaluation (FPE) are reviewed, finding that FPE was positively associated with discomfort in response to receipt of positive social feedback and negatively associated with perceived accuracy of the feedback received.
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Whether, how, and when social anxiety shapes positive experiences and events: a self-regulatory framework and treatment implications.

TL;DR: A self-control resource depletion model is presented to explain how the intense self-regulatory efforts of high socially anxious individuals dampen positive experiences and events.
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The Bivalent Fear of Evaluation Model of Social Anxiety: Further Integrating Findings on Fears of Positive and Negative Evaluation

TL;DR: This study tested various hypotheses pertaining to a novel, expanded conceptualization of social anxiety involving these two distinct fears: the bivalent fear of evaluation (BFOE) model and obtained findings that replicate and extend support for the BFOE model of social Anxiety.