02018nas a2200265 4500000000100000008004100001260007600042653003100118653003300149653002400182653002900206653001400235100001800249700002000267700002100287700001900308700001600327700001900343245010800362300001000470490000700480520123700487022001401724020001401738 2007 d c01/2007bSociedad Española para el Estudio de la Ansiedad y el Estrés10aPrivate Self-Consciousness10aGeneralized anxiety disorder10aSelf-Reflectiveness10aInternal State Awareness10aMetaworry1 aRoberto Nuevo1 aMaría Márquez1 aIgnacio Montorio1 aAndrés Losada1 aMaría Izal1 aIsabel Cabrera00aAnalysis of the role of private self-consciousness in the prediction of generalized anxiety symptoms se a13-230 v133 aThis study analyzes if private self-consciousness could play a predictive role in the severity of Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) symptomatology when other variables assumed to play a core role in this disorder, such as trait-anxiety or metaworry, are controlled. Sample was composed of 188 students with a mean of age of 21.9 years (SD = 2.7) and 84.9% being women. The instruments used assessed trait-anxiety (STAI-T), metaworry (AnTI), private self-consciousness (SCS) and severity of GAD symptomatology (WAQ). In a regression analysis with the severity of GAD symptoms as the dependent variable, trait-anxiety was entered in a first step, metaworry in a second step and private self-consciousness in a third step. Percentage of additional variance explained by private self-consciousness was not statistically significant. The differential role of the private self-consciousness subdimensions was analyzed: self-reflectiveness, but not internal state awareness, explained an additional percentage of variance. These results highlight the usefulness of the conceptual distinction between these two kinds of self-consciousness and suggest that self-reflectiveness could play a relevant role in the severity of the GAD symptoms. a1134-7937 a2174-0437