More reasons to be straightforward: findings and norms for two scales relevant to social anxiety.
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Exploring the Relationship Between Social Anxiety and Bulimic Symptoms: Mediational Effects of Perfectionism Among FemalesFaces in a crowd: high socially anxious individuals estimate that more people are looking at them than low socially anxious individuals.Differentiating emotions across contexts: comparing adults with and without social anxiety disorder using random, social interaction, and daily experience sampling.Partner accommodation in posttraumatic stress disorder: initial testing of the Significant Others' Responses to Trauma Scale (SORTS).Psychometric properties of the Chinese version of the fear of negative evaluation scale-brief (BFNE) and the BFNE-straightforward for middle school students.Affective and Self-Esteem Instability in the Daily Lives of People with Generalized Social Anxiety Disorder.Compensatory internet use among individuals higher in social anxiety and its implications for well-being.Negative Social Evaluative Fears Produce Social Anxiety, Food Intake, and Body Dissatisfaction: Evidence of Similar Mechanisms through Different Pathways.Clarifying the Behavioral Economics of Social Anxiety Disorder: Effects of Interpersonal Problems and Symptom Severity on Generosity.Improving the Factor Structure of Psychological Scales: The Expanded Format as an Alternative to the Likert Scale FormatSocial appearance anxiety, perfectionism, and fear of negative evaluation: distinct or shared risk factors for social anxiety and eating disorders?Age and anxiety and depressive symptoms: the effect on domains of quality of life.Reactivity to exclusion prospectively predicts social anxiety symptoms in young adults.Positive Affect and Social Anxiety Across the Lifespan: An Investigation of Age as a ModeratorAssessing the Straightforwardly-Worded Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation Scale for Differential Item Functioning Across Gender and Ethnicity.Focussing Attention on Oneself Increases the Perception of Being Observed by Others.Within Your Control? When Problem Solving May Be Most Helpful.The affective tie that binds: Examining the contribution of positive emotions and anxiety to relationship formation in social anxiety disorder.A Review of Scales to Measure Social Anxiety Disorder in Clinical and Epidemiological Studies.Clarifying the prospective relationships between social anxiety and eating disorder symptoms and underlying vulnerabilities.TelEMA: a low-cost and user-friendly telephone assessment platform.An examination of the measurement equivalence of the Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation scale across individuals who identify with an asian ethnicity and individuals who identify with a European ethnicity.Understanding heterogeneity in social anxiety disorder: dependency and self-criticism moderate fear responses to interpersonal cues.Validation of the ambivalent and purposeful engagement--trait measure.Impact of Non-Suicidal Self-Injury Scale: Initial Psychometric Validation.The structure of vulnerabilities for social anxiety disorder.Cognitive risk factors explain the relations between neuroticism and social anxiety for males and females.Positive and Negative Affect as Links Between Social Anxiety and Depression: Predicting Concurrent and Prospective Mood Symptoms in Unipolar and Bipolar Mood Disorders.Social Anxiety and Friendship Quality over Time.The latent structure of social anxiety disorder and the performance only specifier: a taxometric analysis.Social anxiety, submissiveness, and shame in men and women: a moderated mediation analysis.Shying away from a good thing: social anxiety in romantic relationships.Exploring linguistic correlates of social anxiety in romantic stories.Self-esteem, Self-focused Attention, and the Mediating Role of Fear of Negative Evaluation in College Students With and Without Asthma.The Core Extrusion Schema-Revised: Hiding Oneself Predicts Severity of Social Interaction Anxiety.Investigating stereotypes of social anxiety.Social anxiety and the Big Five personality traits: the interactive relationship of trust and openness.Social Difficulties As Risk and Maintaining Factors in Anorexia Nervosa: A Mixed-Method Investigation.A Systematic Review of the Psychometric Properties of Trait Social Anxiety Self-Report Measures
P2860
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P2860
More reasons to be straightforward: findings and norms for two scales relevant to social anxiety.
description
2011 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2011 թուականի Փետրուարին հրատարակուած գիտական յօդուած
@hyw
2011 թվականի փետրվարին հրատարակված գիտական հոդված
@hy
2011年の論文
@ja
2011年論文
@yue
2011年論文
@zh-hant
2011年論文
@zh-hk
2011年論文
@zh-mo
2011年論文
@zh-tw
2011年论文
@wuu
name
More reasons to be straightfor ...... es relevant to social anxiety.
@ast
More reasons to be straightfor ...... es relevant to social anxiety.
@en
More reasons to be straightfor ...... es relevant to social anxiety.
@nl
type
label
More reasons to be straightfor ...... es relevant to social anxiety.
@ast
More reasons to be straightfor ...... es relevant to social anxiety.
@en
More reasons to be straightfor ...... es relevant to social anxiety.
@nl
prefLabel
More reasons to be straightfor ...... es relevant to social anxiety.
@ast
More reasons to be straightfor ...... es relevant to social anxiety.
@en
More reasons to be straightfor ...... es relevant to social anxiety.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P1476
More reasons to be straightfor ...... es relevant to social anxiety.
@en
P2093
Franklin R Schneier
Katya C Fernandez
Michael R Liebowitz
Patrick J Brown
Richard G Heimberg
Thomas L Rodebaugh
P2860
P304
P356
10.1016/J.JANXDIS.2011.02.002
P577
2011-02-13T00:00:00Z