Little is known about how to predict which individuals with known temperament vulnerabilities will go on to develop social anxiety problems. Adolescents (N = 185) were followed from age 13 to 18 to evaluate psychosocial, prospective predictors of social anxiety symptoms and fears of negative evaluation (FNE), after accounting for pre-existing social withdrawal symptoms. Results from structural equation modeling suggest that lack of perceived social acceptance predicts subsequent explicit social anxiety and FNE, whereas the emotional intensity of close peer interactions predicts subsequent implicit FNE. Results are discussed in terms of the importance of peer interaction in the development of social anxiety, and the value of measuring both implicit and explicit FNE.
KeywordsSocial anxiety; Fear of negative evaluation; Implicit; Peer interaction Social anxiety and fear of negative evaluation (FNE) are risk factors for numerous maladaptive outcomes, including depression (Stein, Tancer, Gelernter, Vittone, & Uhde, 1990), restricted development of interpersonal relationships (Schneier, Johnson, Hornig, Leibowitz, & Weissman, 1992), poor academic functioning (Turner, Beidel, Dancu, & Keys, 1986), and heightened risk for substance abuse (Page & Andrews, 1996). Given the serious consequences that can follow from social anxiety symptoms, it is essential to determine which individuals are most vulnerable. Although broad vulnerability factors have been known for some time, such as a withdrawn, behaviorally inhibited temperament (e.g., Biederman et al., 1993), little is known about how to predict which particular individuals will go on to develop social anxiety later in life, suggesting the importance of intervening life experiences in the manifestation of anxiety (Turner, Beidel, & Wolff, 1996). Specifically, " prospective studies of children characterized as shy or behaviorally inhibited suggest that a proportion of them will develop anxiety during adolescence. However, to date, it is unclear how to determine which children are likely to develop more severe disorders." (Beidel, Morris, & Turner, 2004, p. 147).In part, this difficulty has arisen because of the paucity of longitudinal, prospective data to shed light on the intervening psychosocial factors and life experiences that exacerbate a given predisposition to become socially anxious (though see exciting work byMorris, 2001;Warren, Huston, Egeland, & Sroufe, 1997, among others
NIH-PA Author ManuscriptNIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript sectional and retrospective studies have suggested the importance of the familial environment, peer relationships, information processing styles and conditioning experiences as critical to the etiology of social anxiety (see excellent reviews by Beidel & Turner, 1998;Hudson & Rapee, 2000;Vasey & Dadds, 2001), it has been difficult to account for the potential influence of biases in recall or the temporal ambiguity inherent in retrospective and cross-sectional studies. Thus, the current study followed a prospect...