15 Facts About Social anxiety

1.

The function of social anxiety is to increase arousal and attention to social interactions, inhibit unwanted social behavior, and motivate preparation for future social situations.

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2.

Social anxiety caused nervousness or crying in an event where they feel anxious.

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3.

Common adult forms of social anxiety include performance anxiety, public speaking anxiety, stage fright, and timidness.

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4.

Criteria that distinguish between clinical and nonclinical forms of social anxiety include the intensity and level of behavioral and psychosomatic disruption in addition to the anticipatory nature of the fear.

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5.

Individuals high in social anxiety perceive themselves as blushing more than those who are low in social anxiety.

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6.

Social anxiety is strongly associated with self-perceived blushing, weakly associated with blushing as measured by physiological indices such as temperature and blood flow to the cheeks and forehead, and moderately associated with observed blushing.

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7.

That social anxiety is associated most strongly with self-perceived blushing is important for cognitive models of blushing and social anxiety, indicating that socially anxious individuals use both internal cues and other types of information to draw conclusions about how they are coming across.

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8.

Individuals with social anxiety might refrain from making eye contact, or constantly fiddling with things during conversations or public speaking.

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9.

Individuals who are high in social anxiety tend to show increased initial attention toward negative social cues such as threatening faces followed by attention away from these social cues, indicating a pattern of hypervigilance followed by avoidance.

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10.

Attention in social anxiety has been measured using the dot-probe paradigm, which presents two faces next to one another.

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11.

The Face-in-the-crowd task shows that individuals with social anxiety are faster at detecting an angry face in a predominantly neutral or positive crowd or slower at detecting happy faces than a nonanxious person.

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12.

The first line treatment for social anxiety disorder is cognitive behavioral therapy with medications recommended only in those who are not interested in therapy.

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13.

The attention given to social anxiety disorder has significantly increased since 1999 with the approval and marketing of drugs for its treatment.

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14.

At its simplest, social anxiety might be regarded as a basic human need to 'fit' into a given social group.

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15.

Ultimately, social anxiety - as interpreted by exclusion theory - emphasizes people's need to be accepted by other people.

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