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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A contextual approach to experiential avoidance and social anxiety: evidence from an experimental interaction and daily interactions of people with social anxiety disorder.

TLDR
The findings provide insight into the association between experiential avoidance on social anxiety in laboratory and naturalistic settings, and demonstrate that the effect of EA depends upon level of social threat and opportunity.
Abstract
Experiential avoidance (EA), the tendency to avoid internal, unwanted thoughts and feelings, is hypothesized to be a risk factor for social anxiety. Existing studies of experiential avoidance rely on trait measures with minimal contextual consideration. In two studies, we examined the association between experiential avoidance and anxiety within real-world social interactions. In the first study, we examined the effect of experiential avoidance on social anxiety in everyday life. For 2 weeks, 37 participants with Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) and 38 healthy controls provided reports of experiential avoidance and social anxiety symptoms during face-to-face social interactions. Results showed that momentary experiential avoidance was positively related to anxiety symptoms during social interactions and this effect was stronger among people with SAD. People low in EA showed greater sensitivity to the level of situational threat than high EA people. In the second study, we facilitated an initial encounter between strangers. Unlike Study 1, we experimentally created a social situation where there was either an opportunity for intimacy (self-disclosure conversation) or no such opportunity (small-talk conversation). Results showed that greater experiential avoidance during the self-disclosure conversation temporally preceded increases in social anxiety for the remainder of the interaction; no such effect was found in the small-talk conversation. Our findings provide insight into the association between experiential avoidance on social anxiety in laboratory and naturalistic settings, and demonstrate that the effect of EA depends upon level of social threat and opportunity.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Emotion Regulation Flexibility

TL;DR: This article proposed a translational framework for the study of emotion regulation in normative and clinical populations, which is relevant to both basic research, experimental psychopathology, and clinical practice, and specify how such tools can be used in a variety of settings.
Journal ArticleDOI

The aetiology and maintenance of social anxiety disorder: A synthesis of complimentary theoretical models and formulation of a new integrated model.

TL;DR: On balance, there is empirical evidence for the association of each of the factors in the IAM model with social anxiety or SAD, providing preliminary support for the model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adaptive and maladaptive emotion regulation strategies: interactive effects during CBT for social anxiety disorder.

TL;DR: It is found that putatively adaptive and maladaptive emotion regulation strategies interacted with each other in the prediction of social anxiety symptoms in a sample of 71 participants undergoing CBT for SAD and that this interaction was qualified by a three-way interaction with a contextual factor, namely treatment study phase.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experience sampling and ecological momentary assessment for studying the daily lives of patients with anxiety disorders: a systematic review.

TL;DR: Benefits of ESM/EMA for the study of anxiety disorders include generating insight into the temporal variability of symptoms and into the associations among daily affect, behaviors, and situational cues.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Individual differences in two emotion regulation processes: implications for affect, relationships, and well-being.

TL;DR: Five studies tested two general hypotheses: Individuals differ in their use of emotion regulation strategies such as reappraisal and suppression, and these individual differences have implications for affect, well-being, and social relationships.
Journal ArticleDOI

The emerging field of emotion regulation: An integrative review.

TL;DR: The emerging field of emotion regulation studies how individuals influence which emotions they have, when they have them, and how they experience and express them as mentioned in this paper, and characterizes emotion in terms of response tendencies.
Reference EntryDOI

Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV-TR)

TL;DR: The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition, text revision (DSM-IV-TR) (American Psychiatric Association], 2000) is a compendium of mental disorders, a listing of the criteria used to diagnose them, and a detailed system for their definition, organization, and classification.
Book

Multilevel Analysis: Techniques and Applications

Joop J. Hox
TL;DR: This work focuses on the development of a single model for Multilevel Regression, which has been shown to provide good predictive power in relation to both the number of cases and the severity of the cases.
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