Abstract

BackgroundPreliminary evidence suggests that impairment of social performance in socially anxious individuals may be specific to selective aspects of performance and be more pronounced in females. This evidence is based primarily on contrasting results from studies using all-male or all-female samples or that differ in type of social behaviour assessed. However, methodological differences (e.g. statistical power, participant population) across these studies means it is difficult to determine whether behavioural or gender-specific effects are genuine or artefactual. The current study examined whether the link between social anxiety and social behaviour was dependent upon gender and the behavioural dimension assessed within the same study under methodologically homogenous conditions.MethodsNinety-three university students (45 males, 48 females) with a mean age of 25.6 years and varying in their level of social anxiety underwent an interaction and a speech task. The speech task involved giving a brief impromptu presentation in front of a small group of three people, while the interaction task involved “getting to know” an opposite-sex confederate. Independent raters assessed social performance on 5 key dimensions from Fydrich’s Social Performance Rating Scale.ResultsRegression analysis revealed a significant moderate association of social anxiety with behavioral discomfort (e.g., fidgeting, trembling) for interaction and speech tasks, but no association with other performance dimensions (e.g., verbal fluency, quality of verbal expression). No sex differences were found.ConclusionsThese results suggest that the impairing effects of social anxiety within the non-clinical range may exacerbate overt behavioral agitation during high demand social challenges but have little impact on other observable aspects of performance quality.

Highlights

  • Preliminary evidence suggests that impairment of social performance in socially anxious individuals may be specific to selective aspects of performance and be more pronounced in females

  • Significant increases from baseline anxiety were uniformly found at pre-task (t (44) =3.61, p < .001) and during-task (t (44) =5.63, p < .001) in the speech task, and pre-task (t (44) =2.52, p = .015) and during-task (t (44) =4.15, p < .001) in the interaction task

  • This pattern of results was replicated for females, with significant increases from baseline anxiety observed at pre-task (t (47) =4.49, p < .001) and during-task (t (47) =8.58, p < .001) for the speech task, and pre-task (t (47) =5.89, p = .015) and during-task (t (47) =4.03, p < .001) for the interaction task

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Summary

Introduction

Preliminary evidence suggests that impairment of social performance in socially anxious individuals may be specific to selective aspects of performance and be more pronounced in females. This evidence is based primarily on contrasting results from studies using all-male or all-female samples or that differ in type of social behaviour assessed. There is little evidence to suggest that social anxiety may negatively affect others’ perceptions of agreeableness or warmth [5]. If social anxiety impairs an individual’s ability to function effectively in common performance situations such as job interviews, presentations and other social challenges [6], this could cause or maintain feelings of failure and inadequacy and even affect career success [7]. Social anxiety can (2019) 7:24 lead to a willingness to engage in socially-facilitative behavior such as polite smiling, head nodding and avoiding interruption, which can facilitate interaction and lead to more favorable impression of another’s social behavior [9]

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