Cognitive biases in social phobia

Author
Abstract
Social phobics possess a variety of cognitive biases, including selective attentional, interpretive, and memory biases. Of these biases, the most important is probably the interpretive bias in which social phobics exaggerate the inadequacy of their social behaviour. There are two main reasons why this interpretive bias is maintained: (1) social phobics engage in safetyseeking behaviours, which limit the feedback about their social behaviour that they obtain from other people; and (2) social phobics attend to their own internal physiological symptoms, and use this information to infer how anxious they seem to others. An important part of cognitivebehaviour therapy should involve attempts to reduce to eliminate interpretive bias by decreasing social phobics use of safety-seeking behaviours and by altering their attentional focus from internal sensations to the reactions of others.
Keywords
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Journal
Ansiedad y Estrés
Year of Publication
1999
Volume
5
Issue
2-3
Number of Pages
275-284
Date Published
07/1999
Type of Article
Journal article
Publisher
ISSN Number
1134-7937
ISBN Number
2174-0437
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