Comparing and Contrasting Fears of Positive
and Negative Evaluation
as Facets of Social Anxiety
Justin W. Weeks
Tejal A. Jakatdar
Richard G. Heimberg
Adult Anxiety Clinic
of Temple University
Abstract
Cognitive-behavioral
theorists have proposed that fear of negative evaluation (FNE) is the core
feature of social anxiety (Clark & Wells, 1995; Rapee & Heimberg,
1997). However, emerging evidence supports the notion that fear of evaluation in general is important in social
anxiety, including fear of positive evaluation (FPE) as well as negative
evaluation (e.g., see Weeks, Heimberg, & Rodebaugh, 2008a; Weeks, Heimberg,
Rodebaugh, & Norton, 2008b). The purposes of the present study were to test
several new hypotheses related to this expanded conceptualization of social anxiety, as well as to
replicate the two-factor structural model consisting of separate factors for
fears of positive and negative evaluation originally reported by Weeks et al.
(2008a). The present findings further support
FPE and FNE as distinct latent constructs. FPE and FNE related similarly to
social anxiety but demonstrated unique
relationships with several social anxiety-related constructs and emerged as distinct
from several discriminant constructs with strong thematic overlap to FPE/FNE. The
findings from the present study provide additional support for the hypothesis
that fear of evaluation in general is important in social anxiety.
Comparing and Contrasting Fears of Positive
and Negative Evaluation
as Facets of Social Anxiety
Cognitive-behavioral
theorists have labeled fear of negative evaluation a core feature of social
anxiety (e.g., Clark & Wells, 1995; Rapee & Heimberg, 1997), and
extensive empirical support has been obtained in support of this notion (e.g.,
Coles, Turk, Heimberg, & Fresco, 2001; Hackmann, Surawy, & Clark, 1998;
Horley, Williams, Gonsalvez, & Gordon, 2004; Mansell & Clark, 1999).
More recently, Weeks and colleagues (Weeks, Heimberg, & Rodebaugh, 2008a;
Weeks, Heimberg, Rodebaugh, & Norton, 2008b) have hypothesized that fear of
evaluation in general is important in
social anxiety, including fears of both positive and negative evaluation.
Fear of positive evaluation (FPE)
consists of the expectation that others may evaluate one positively, feelings
of apprehension about others’ positive evaluations of oneself, and distress
over these evaluations (Weeks et al., 2008a). This construct is distinct from,
albeit strongly related to, the constructs of social anxiety and fear of
negative evaluation (FNE). Specifically, FPE pertains to the sense of dread
associated with being evaluated favorably
and publicly, which necessitates a
direct social comparison of the self to others and therefore causes an
individual to feel conspicuous and “in the spotlight.” In contrast, social
anxiety pertains to affective reactions
to these situations, and FNE pertains to the sense of dread associated with
being evaluated unfavorably while
anticipating or participating in a social situation.
Preliminary support
for this expanded conceptualization of fear of evaluation in social anxiety has
been obtained in several undergraduate samples (Weeks et al., 2008a; 2008b; Weeks,
Norton, & Heimberg, in press). FPE correlates strongly and positively with
FNE, and both constructs correlate strongly with social anxiety (Weeks et al., 2008a;
2008b). However, initial findings also suggest that FPE is distinct from FNE. FPE
accounted for unique variance in the prediction of social interaction anxiety
and fear of public scrutiny above and beyond that accounted for by FNE (Weeks
et al., 2008a; 2008b). Furthermore, confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) of the
combined straightforwardly worded items from self-report measures of FPE and FNE
in an undergraduate sample suggested that a two-factor model (i.e., separate
factors for FPE and FNE) fit the data well and was superior to a single-factor
model. The two factors were highly correlated, suggesting that a higher-order fear of evaluation factor may be present.
However, this factor solution has yet to be cross-validated in an independent
sample (Weeks et al., 2008a).
Fears of positive
and negative evaluation have also demonstrated specific relationships with
social anxiety, which are not accounted for by relationships with other types
of anxiety/negative affect. For example, FNE exhibited lesser relationships
with worry, anxiety sensitivity, and depression than with social anxiety in a
sample of patients with social anxiety disorder (Weeks et al., 2005). FPE has
demonstrated the same pattern of specificity in several undergraduate samples
(Weeks et al., 2008a; 2008b). Indeed, FPE related more strongly to fear of
public scrutiny and social interaction anxiety than to symptoms of several non-social
anxiety disorders (i.e., generalized anxiety disorder, obsessive-compulsive
disorder, panic disorder) or with overall levels of anxiety and stress (Weeks
et al., 2008a; 2008b).
Finally, FPE related positively to discomfort
associated with receiving positive social feedback and negatively to perception
of the accuracy of that feedback; in contrast, FNE was not related to either
discomfort associated with, or perceived accuracy of, positive social feedback.
Given previous findings which suggest that FNE is associated with a negatively-biased
mental representation of the self (e.g., Coles et al., 2001; Hackmann et al.,
1998), the findings of Weeks and colleagues suggest that social anxiety may be
characterized by a self-image simultaneously biased by indicators of positive
and negative aspects of the self. However, in contrast to the
bias involved in negative aspects of the self-image (i.e., FNE), which are
magnified in the mental representation, FPE may lead to a minimization
of positive aspects of the self (e.g., socially anxious individuals
may possess a self-image that specifies that they are nervous-looking and are not
fun to be around, respectively) (see Weeks et al., 2008b).
Theoretical
Framework for Fear of Evaluation in Social Anxiety
This model of fear of evaluation in social anxiety is consistent with accumulating findings in the literature
that underscore a general relationship between social anxiety and
diminished/impaired positive psychological experiences, such as anticipation of
more frequent and intense negative emotional reactions to positive social
events (Gilboa-Schechtman, Franklin, & Foa, 2000) and decreased concomitant
positive affect and other positive psychological experiences (e.g., curiosity),
even upon controlling for depressive symptoms (Kashdan, 2007). Also
consistent with the notion of FPE, Wallace and Alden (1995; 1997) and
colleagues (Alden, Mellings, & Laposa, 2001) have reported that socially
anxious individuals worry that positive evaluation of their performance raises
the social standards by which they will be evaluated in the future, whereas
they do not believe that their typical performance will change for the better.
As a result, they predict that positive evaluation by others will ultimately
result in failure.
This model is also consistent in part with the evolutionary
account of social anxiety put forth by Gilbert (2001), who proposed that social
anxiety is an evolutionary mechanism that facilitates non-violent group
interactions. With respect to FNE, Gilbert proposed that avoiding negative
evaluation would have been adaptive in demonstrating to others that one is
worthy of social investments and in avoiding conflict with individuals who
ranked higher on a social hierarchy. Recent findings demonstrating that social
anxiety is associated with significant reductions in testosterone levels among human
males in response to social defeat (but not success) suggest that social
anxiety is indeed related to submissiveness in competitive social contexts
(Maner, Miller, Schmidt, & Eckel, 2008) and provide direct support for
Gilbert’s social anxiety model. Relevant to FPE, Gilbert suggested that
socially anxious individuals would also fear increases in status that could
lead to conflict with more powerful others. Gilbert further suggested that
socially anxious individuals may fear that they will not be able to maintain or
defend social gains in the future and dubbed (p. 742) this concept the “fear of
doing well.”
In essence, social threat could entail any situation in which the person might receive either positive or
negative evaluation (see Weeks et al., 2008a). This notion is indirectly
supported by findings that social anxiety is positively associated with public
self-consciousness, one’s general tendency to consider his or her public
presence (Bruch, Gorsky, Collins, & Berger, 1989; Hope & Heimberg,
1988). Prior to outlining the hypotheses of the present study, we briefly
review findings on several social anxiety-related constructs relevant to our model.
Empirical Links between Fears of
Evaluation and Other Social Anxiety-Relevant Constructs
Social anxiety
disorder has been characterized by low trait levels of positive affect and high
trait levels of negative affect (Brown, Chorpita, & Barlow, 1998); social
interaction anxiety, in particular, has been associated with low positive
affect (Hughes et al., 2006). Previous findings suggest FNE is
a partially heritable trait related to other dimensions that may also be
related to social anxiety (e.g., trait anxiousness, submissiveness, social
avoidance; see Stein, Jang, & Livesley, 2002); similarly, FPE is
conceptualized as a trait, consistent with the finding that scores obtained on
a measure of FPE remain stable over time (see Weeks et al., 2008a).
Consistent with Gilbert’s (2001) psycho-evolutionary
model, submissive behavior and social comparison tendencies have been linked to
social anxiety. Schneier, Heimberg, Belzer, and Liebowitz (2006) reported that both
increased submissive behavior and lower perceived social status were
associated with greater social anxiety and disability in patients with social
anxiety disorder, as well as healthy controls, and previous findings support a positive relationship between FPE and
self-reported submissive behaviors (Weeks et al., 2008b). Findings pertaining
to the relationships between submissive behaviors and FNE, as well as between
social comparison tendencies, positive and negative affect, and FPE/FNE, have
not been reported. However, based on the
proposition that both types of evaluation are central to social anxiety, we
expected that both FPE and FNE would relate positively to trait negative affect
and submissive behaviors and negatively to trait positive affect and social
self-rankings.
Horner (1969) proposed the construct fear of success, the disposition to become anxious about achieving
success due to expectations of negative consequences of succeeding, as a means
of explaining putative gender differences in achievement motivation. Horner
(1969) asserted that women are motivated to avoid success when they expect
negative consequences (e.g., rejection by others, social isolation, feelings of
being unfeminine) as a result of adopting stereotypic masculine gender roles which
can facilitate occupational success (e.g., being competitive or assertive) yet which
traditionally conflict with stereotypic feminine gender roles. Fear of success
has received equivocal support (see Tresemer, 1976, for a review). However,
relevant to the present study, fear of success related positively to anxiety
(Gelbort & Winer, 1985). Given the thematic overlap between fear of success
and FPE, examining the inter-relationships between these constructs and social
anxiety is necessary to determine whether they are distinct.
Horner’s hypothesis that significant gender differences will
exist with respect to fear of success marks a critical distinction between the
constructs of fear of success and FPE. No a priori reason exists to suggest that FPE
would vary by gender, and no gender differences in FPE have been reported to
date (Weeks et al., 2008a; 2008b). Thus, some indirect evidence has already
been obtained in support of a distinction between FPE and fear of success. However,
it has been argued that fear of success can be experienced by both men and
women (e.g., Miller, 1994; Monahan, Kuhn, & Shaver, 1974; Schuster, 1955),
and a direct assessment of the relationship/distinction between fear of success
and FPE is necessary to conduct a valid test of discriminant/incremental
validity. In addition, despite its potential
relevance to the study of social anxiety/fear of evaluation, no examination
of the relationships between fear of success, FNE, and social anxiety has yet been
reported; thus, these relationships were also examined.
Valentiner, Renner, and Smith (2008) have obtained preliminary
findings demonstrating strong inter-relationships between social anxiety, low
social self-esteem, and a preference for negative feedback about one’s social
worth. Valentiner et al. interpret their findings as being consistent with self-verification theory (Swann, 1983;
1990), which asserts that individuals tend to seek out, prefer, and elicit
information that is congruent with their self-image and tend to reject and fail
to process information that is inconsistent with that image. This preference
for congruent information may exist even when one’s self-image is negative, as
is generally the case with social anxiety (e.g., see Jones, Briggs, &
Smith, 1986; Leary & Kowalski, 1995). It is important to examine the
distinction between FPE and a preference for negative feedback. Could FPE
simply reflect a tendency to reject positive social feedback/prefer negative
social feedback? Similarly, examining the relationship between a preference for
positive social feedback and FNE could potentially provide useful information
regarding the underlying mechanisms of FNE.
Summary of Study Hypotheses
We sought to test several new hypotheses generated on the
basis of our fear of evaluation model of social anxiety, as well as to
replicate the structural
model originally reported by Weeks et al. (2008a). The following hypotheses
were tested: (a) The two-factor fear of
evaluation model originally reported by Weeks et al. (2008a) would
successfully cross-validate in the current sample; (b) FPE and FNE would
correlate positively with trait negative (social situation-specific) affect and
negatively with trait positive (social situation-specific) affect, and these
relationships would remain robust upon controlling for the alternative type of
fear of evaluation; (c) FPE and FNE would correlate positively with submissive
behaviors and negatively with social self-rankings; (d) FPE and FNE would each correlate
more strongly with social anxiety than would fear of success; and (e) FPE and
FNE would correlate more strongly with each other at the latent level than with
preferences for positive or negative social feedback.
Method
Participants
Participants in the present study
were undergraduate psychology students at Temple University (N = 423) who received course credit for
their participation. The majority were female (73.1%). In addition, 56.0% of
participants were Caucasian, 20.0% were African American, 12.7% were Asian
American, 10.5% were of other ethnicity, and 0.8% were of mixed ethnicity. Participants
had a mean age of 19.55 years (SD =
2.73).
Measures
Fear of Positive Evaluation Scale (FPES; Weeks et al., 2008a). The 10-item FPES uses
a 10-point Likert-type rating scale, ranging from 0 (not at all true) to 9
(very true). Two reverse-scored items are included (for the purpose of
potentially detecting response biases) but are not utilized in the calculation
of the FPES total score. The FPES has demonstrated strong internal consistency
(all a’s > .80)
and 5-week retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient = .70) in undergraduate
samples. Furthermore, the FPES has demonstrated strong convergent and
discriminant validity (Weeks et al., 2008a; 2008b) as well as factorial
validity in a series of CFAs (Weeks et al., 2008a) in several undergraduate
samples.
The FPES demonstrated good
internal consistency in the present sample (a = .83).
The Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation
Scale-Straightforward Items (BFNE-S:
Rodebaugh et al., 2004; Weeks et al., 2005). The BFNE (Leary, 1983) is a
12-item self-report measure of fear and distress related to negative evaluation
from others. Items are rated on a 5-point Likert-type scale, ranging from 1 (Not at all characteristic of me) to 5 (Extremely characteristic of me).
Rodebaugh et al. (2004) and Weeks et al. (2005) have reported that the 8
straightforwardly-worded items are more reliable and valid indicators of fear
of negative evaluation than the reverse-scored items in undergraduate and
clinical samples, respectively. Consequently, Rodebaugh et al. and Weeks et al.
have suggested utilizing only the 8 straightforward (-S) BFNE items to
calculate the total score. The BFNE-S has demonstrated excellent internal
consistency (all α’s > .92), factorial validity, and construct validity in
undergraduate (Rodebaugh et al., 2004) and clinical (Weeks et al., 2005)
samples. The 12-item BFNE was administered; however, only the BFNE-S items were
utilized in the present analyses. The BFNE-S demonstrated excellent internal
consistency in the present sample (a = .92).
Measures
of social anxiety.
The Social Phobia Scale
(SPS; Mattick & Clarke, 1998).
The SPS measures fear of public scrutiny and consists of 20 items which are
scored on a 5-point Likert-type rating scale ranging from 0 (Not at all characteristic or true of me)
to 4 (Extremely characteristic or true of
me). The SPS has demonstrated strong internal consistency in clinical,
community, and undergraduate samples (as range from .89 to .94) (Mattick
& Clarke, 1998), and adequate retest
reliability (r = .66) in a sample of undergraduates
(Heimberg, Mueller, Holt, Hope, & Liebowitz, 1992). Furthermore, Mattick
and Clarke (1998) reported that the SPS adequately
discriminated among patients with anxiety disorders (social anxiety disorder,
agoraphobia, simple phobia) and between individuals with social anxiety
disorder and controls (undergraduate and community samples). The SPS
demonstrated excellent internal consistency in the present sample (a = .93).
Social Interaction Anxiety
Scale-Straightforward Items (SIAS-S; Rodebaugh, Woods, & Heimberg, 2007). The Social Interaction Anxiety Scale (SIAS; Mattick & Clarke, 1998) is a measure of anxiety in dyads and groups, and
consists of 20 items that are scored on a five-point Likert-type scale ranging
from 0 (Not at all characteristic or true
of me) to 4 (Extremely characteristic
or true of me). Rodebaugh and colleagues have reported that the 17
straightforwardly-worded items of the SIAS are more valid indicators of social
interaction anxiety than the reverse-scored items in both undergraduate and
clinical samples. Consequently, Rodebaugh et al. suggested the scoring strategy
of utilizing only the straightforward SIAS items to calculate the total score,
thereby yielding a 17-item score, hereafter referred to as the
SIAS-Straightforward (SIAS-S) score. The SIAS-S has
demonstrated excellent internal consistency (α = .93) and factorial
validity in undergraduate samples and has
demonstrated strong construct validity in both undergraduate and clinical
samples (Rodebaugh et al., 2007). The 20-item SIAS was administered; however,
only the SIAS-S items were utilized here. The SIAS-S demonstrated excellent
internal consistency in the present sample (a =
.93).1
Measures of affect,
submissive behavior, and social comparison.
Positive and
Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS;
Watson, Clark, & Tellegen, 1988). The PANAS is comprised of two 10-item
scales designed to assess positive affect and negative affect, respectively.
The PANAS scales may be administered with different temporal instructions,
including “right now” and “today.” Using such administration instructions, the
scales have demonstrated excellent internal consistency (all αs > .85) and
are largely uncorrelated (both rs
< -.15). Furthermore, the positive affect scale has demonstrated positive
correlations with items assessing pleasant states (e.g., joyful, pleasant,
self-confident), whereas the negative affect scale has demonstrated positive
correlations with measures of depression, general distress, and general
dysfunction (Watson et al., 1988), providing support for the convergent validity
of the scales. Participants were instructed to indicate the extent to which they
experience the various positive and negative feelings listed in the PANAS while
interacting with others in general.
Both the positive and negative affect scales of the PANAS demonstrated good internal consistency in the present
sample (as = .87 and .89,
respectively).
The
Submissive Behavior Scale (SBS;
Gilbert & Allan, 1994). The SBS is a 16-item self-report measure that
assesses involuntary submissive behaviors. The SBS was designed to
explore the relationship of evolved mental mechanisms of social rank to
psychopathology and was derived from an earlier measure (Buss & Craik, 1986).
Sample SBS items include: “I agree that I am wrong even though I know I’m not” and
“I avoid direct eye contact.” The SBS has demonstrated adequate internal
consistency in both clinical and control (both αs
> .74) samples (Schneier et al., 2006). Furthermore, the SBS correlated strongly with a clinician-administered
measure of social anxiety, and patients with generalized social anxiety
disorder obtained higher SBS scores than controls (Schneier et al., 2006),
providing support for the construct validity of the scale. The SBS demonstrated good internal consistency in
the present sample (a = .86).
The Social Comparison Rating Scale (SCRS;
Allan & Gilbert, 1995). The SCRS is an
11-item self-report measure that assesses social comparison tendencies (i.e.,
tendencies to compare oneself to others), with lower SCRS scores reflecting
lower social self-rankings. The SCRS total score has demonstrated excellent internal
consistency in both undergraduate and clinical samples
(both αs > .88; Allan &
Gilbert, 1995). Consistent with theoretical
models of social comparison, negative correlations have been reported between
scores on the SCRS and various self-report indices of psychopathology
(indicating that lower social self-rankings are associated with increased
psychopathological symptoms), and clinical samples obtain lower social
comparison scores than undergraduates (Allan & Gilbert, 1995). The
instructions of the SCRS were modified for the purposes of the present study,
specifying that respondents rate how they generally compare themselves to others of the same gender (as opposed to others),
as we expected that social comparison tendencies would vary systematically by
gender (e.g., we expected that males would be more concerned about their
strength relative to other males rather
than to others in general). The SCRS demonstrated
excellent internal consistency in the present sample (a = .93).
Measures of other
(discriminant) constructs.
The Fear of Success Scale (FOSS; Zuckerman & Allison, 1976).
The FOSS is a widely used measure of fear of success, consisting of 27 items
(11 of which are reverse-scored) rated using a yes-no format. The FOSS related
positively to a projective measure of fear of success and negatively to a
measure of achievement motivation, providing support for its convergent
validity. Furthermore, individuals with higher FOSS scores performed less well
on an anagram test, attributed success to more external factors, and attributed
failure to more internal factors than individuals with lower scores (Zuckerman
& Allison, 1976).
Metzler and Conroy
(2004) conducted a series of CFAs examining the FOSS in a sample of
undergraduate athletes and found that a structural model based on the original scoring
strategy demonstrated inadequate fit. Although they suggested that their
findings could be attributable to poor psychometric properties of the reverse-scored
FOSS items, Metzler and Conroy did not report on an alternative model with
separate factors for straightforward and reverse-scored items. Consistent with Metzler
and Conroy’s findings, the internal consistency of the FOSS in the present sample
was poor (a
= .54). However, the 16 straightforward FOSS items demonstrated acceptable
internal consistency (a = .78). Thus, only responses to the straightforward
FOSS items were utilized here, henceforth referred to as the FOSS-Straightforward
scale (FOSS-S).
The Feedback Seeking Questionnaire-Social subscale-Dimensional
format (FSQ-S-D). The Feedback
Seeking Questionnaire-Social subscale (FSQ-S; Valentiner et al., 2008) is
an 18-item self-report measure of preference for negative feedback about one’s social
value. Three social domains are assessed by the FSQ-S: social affection, social
friendship, and social intimacy. Respondents are presented with six self-referent
questions for each of the three domains, three of which are framed negatively and
three of which are framed positively. Respondents are then instructed to read
all of the questions for each section and to select the two self-referent questions
from each domain that they would most prefer
an individual whom the respondent considers to be a close other to answer.
Scores on the FSQ-S are calculated by totaling the number of negatively-framed self-referent
questions that respondents endorse. The FSQ-S has demonstrated good internal
consistency in an undergraduate sample (a = .84). Furthermore, it
has been shown to correlate positively with social anxiety and negatively with
social self-esteem. Given that the forced-choice response format of the FSQ-S may
result in missing data (see Valentiner et al., 2008), we modified the FSQ-S to include
a Likert-type rating scale ranging from 0 (I
would strongly prefer that they not answer this question about me) to 4 (I would strongly prefer that they answer
this question about me) and instructed respondents to rate each question with respect to whether or
not they would prefer a close other to answer it.
Procedure
Participants
completed the above measures in partial fulfillment of research requirements
for their Introductory Psychology course. Only those participants who responded
to all straightforward items of the FPES and the BFNE (n = 419; 99.05% of the initial sampling pool) were included in the
present study.
CFA was
performed using the structural equation modeling software program AMOS 6.0
(Arbuckle, 2005). In determining factor structure, global model fit was
evaluated using the: (a) Tucker-Lewis incremental fit index (TLI; Tucker &
Lewis, 1973), (b) comparative fit index (CFI, Bentler, 1990), and (c) root mean
square error of approximation (RMSEA, Steiger & Lind, 1980). The magnitude
of these indices was evaluated with the aid of recommendations by Hu and
Bentler (1999).
Results
Preliminary
analyses
Means
and standard deviations for participants’ responses to all questionnaires are
displayed in Table 1. Both FPES scores (skewness = 0.25, SE = .12; kurtosis = -0.18, SE
= 0.24) and BFNE-S scores (skewness = 0.37, SE = .12; kurtosis = -0.45, SE
= 0.24) were normally distributed in the overall sample. Furthermore, no
gender differences were found for either FPES, F (1, 416) = 0.04, p =
.84, or BFNE-S, F (1, 416) = 2.33, p = .13, scores.2
Evaluating
the distinction between FPE and FNE utilizing confirmatory factor analysis
We attempted to
replicate the two-factor model originally reported by Weeks et al. (2008a), in
which all 8 straightforward FPES items loaded onto a single latent factor (i.e.,
fear of positive evaluation) and all 8 straightforward BFNE items
loaded onto a single, correlated latent factor (i.e., fear of negative evaluation). We also compared this model to a nested
single-factor model with all straightforward FPES and BFNE items loading onto a
single latent factor.
The correlated
two-factor model demonstrated adequate fit (CFI = .95; TLI = .94; RMSEA = .05)
and provided better fit to the data (χ2 (1) = 673.67, p < .001) than the single-factor
solution, which demonstrated poor fit (CFI = .74; TLI = .66; RMSEA = .14). All
loadings from this model were statistically significant (p < .01). See Figure 1. Similar
to the findings of Weeks et al. (2008a), the two factors were strongly and positively
correlated (r = .49, p < .001), suggesting that a
higher-order fear of evaluation factor
may be present. However, given that at least three lower-order factors are
necessary to adequately test a higher-order confirmatory factor solution, we
were unable to evaluate the fit of such a solution in the present study.
Relationships between fears of
evaluation, negative affect, and positive affect
A
Bonferroni correction (.05/4 = .0125) was applied, which controlled for the
number of comparisons between FPE, FNE, and (social interaction-specific) negative
and positive affect. As expected, FPE and FNE were both positively correlated
with negative affect (PANAS-NA), and negatively correlated with positive affect
(PANAS-PA) (see Table 2). Moreover, as
hypothesized, the relationships between FPE and both negative and positive
affect remained robust upon controlling for FNE (r = .20, p < .001; r = -.12, p = .014, respectively), and the relationships between FNE and both
negative and positive affect remained robust upon controlling for FPE (r = .44, p < .001; r = -.18, p < .001, respectively). Exploratory significance tests (Meng, Rosenthal, & Rubin, 1992)
were conducted to determine whether FNE related more strongly than FPE to
negative/positive affect. FNE
related more strongly than FPE to negative affect (z = 3.53, p < .001) but
not positive affect (z = -0.78, p = .44).
Relationships between FPE, FNE,
submissive behaviors, and social comparison
Two
standard regression equations were tested to examine whether: a) submissive
behaviors were positively predicted by both FPE and FNE, and b) social
self-rankings were negatively predicted by both FPE and FNE. FPES and BFNE-S
scores were entered as simultaneous predictors in both equations. The SBS score
was the criterion variable in the first equation, the SCRS total score the
criterion variable in the second. Consistent with hypotheses, FPE and FNE were both
significant predictors of submissive behaviors and social comparison tendencies,
and all of these effects were in the expected directions (see Table 3). These
effects were large (Cohen’s f2 =
.82) for predicting submissive behaviors, and small (Cohen’s f2 = .19) for predicting
social comparison tendencies (Cohen, 1988).
Distinction
between Fears of Evaluation and Success
Both FPE and FNE exhibited small positive correlations with
fear of success (FOSS-S scores; see Table
2). Consistent with hypothesis, significance tests (Meng et al., 1992) revealed
that FPE and FNE each correlated significantly more strongly with fear of
public scrutiny and social interaction anxiety than did fear of success (all zs > 4.94, all ps < .001).
Distinction
between FPE, FNE, and Preferences for Negative and Positive Social Feedback
Before examining the
correlations between fears of evaluation and preferences for positive and negative
social feedback, additional CFAs were conducted. Specifically, we sought to
test a model consisting of four latent correlated factors (i.e., fear of positive evaluation, fear of
negative evaluation, preference for negative social feedback, and preference for positive social feedback).
However, to test such a model, we first needed to evaluate the factor structure
of the FSQ-S-D, as no findings have yet been reported on the factor structure
of this measure.
Evaluating the
factor structure of the FSQ-S-D.
We initially tested a confirmatory structural model
consisting of two correlated latent factors, with the 9 items pertaining to
preference for positive social feedback loading onto one latent factor (i.e., preference for positive feedback; PPF)
and the 9 items pertaining to preference for negative social feedback loading
onto the other (i.e., preference for
negative feedback; PNF). This
model was then compared to an alternative solution with all 18 FSQ-S-D items
loading onto a single factor, but neither model demonstrated adequate fit (both
CFIs < .92; both TLIs < .89; both RMSEAs > .10). Given that the FSQ-S-D
is comprised of 9 pairs of opposing feedback items and that respondents were instructed
to rate the extent to which self-oriented feedback regarding each item would be
preferred, it seemed reasonable to assume that the FSQ-S-D item pairs would overlap
with respect to measurement error (i.e., respondents would likely be subject to
similar response tendencies when responding to items pertaining to being good at intimacy vs. not being
good at intimacy). Thus, we evaluated two additional confirmatory
structural models.
The first of these models consisted of the two correlated factors reflecting
preferences for negative and positive feedback, but with the residuals of each
pair of feedback-related items (i.e., positive vs. negative) allowed to correlate
as a means of modeling error variance. Similarly, the second alternative model tested
consisted of a single-factor solution including all 18 FSQ-S-D items, with the
residuals of each pair of feedback-related items (i.e., positive vs. negative) allowed
to correlate. The two-factor, correlated-residual structural model demonstrated
adequate fit (CFI = .95; TLI = .93; RMSEA = .08) and provided a better fit to
the data (χ2 (1) = 1208.75, p <
.001) than the single-factor solution with correlated residuals, which
demonstrated poor fit (CFI = .79; TLI = .71; RMSEA = .17).3 All
loadings from the two-factor, correlated-residual structural model were
statistically significant (p <
.01). The two preference for feedback factors were highly correlated (r = .76). The internal consistency of
the items for both the PNF and PPF factors was excellent (both as
> .95).
Latent distinction between fears of evaluation and feedback preferences.
We next sought to examine
whether FPE and FNE would emerge as distinct from PNF and PPF as latent factors.
Thus, we tested a confirmatory structural model consisting of four correlated,
latent factors which represented an integration of: (a) the two-factor fear of evaluation model of Weeks and
colleagues (2008a), and (b) the two-factor preference
for feedback model with correlated residuals reported above. Consistent
with hypothesis, this four-factor model demonstrated adequate fit (CFI = .95;
TLI = .94; RMSEA = .05) in the present sample.4 All loadings from
this model were statistically significant (p
< .01).
Latent correlations among the two fear of evaluation factors
and the two preference for social feedback factors are displayed in Table 4. FPE
correlated significantly and negatively with a preference for positive social
feedback, whereas FNE correlated significantly and negatively with a preference
for negative social feedback. In addition, FPE also correlated negatively with
a preference for negative feedback. Most importantly, FPE and FNE correlated significantly
more strongly with each other than with preferences for either positive or
negative social feedback (both zs
> -4.09, both ps < .001),
providing additional support for the distinction of FPE and FNE from
preferences for positive/negative feedback. Indeed, the relationship between
FPE and FNE was more than twice the strength of any of the relationships
between either of the fear of evaluation factors and the feedback-preference
factors.
Distinction between feedback preferences and other constructs.
Bivariate correlations of scores obtained on the two
preference for social feedback subscales and all other measures are displayed in
Table 2 (an overall correction of p =
.01 was applied). PPF and PNF related negatively to both fear of public
scrutiny and social interaction anxiety. Interestingly, both PPF and PNF related
positively to social interaction specific-positive affect (PANAS-PA scores) and
social self-rankings (SCRS scores) but did not relate significantly to social
interaction specific-negative affect (PANAS-NA scores); both preferences for
feedback related negatively to submissive behavior (although note that the
relationship between PPF and SBS scores was not significant upon correction; p < .04) and fear of success. Moreover,
the overall relationships between PPF/PNF and social anxiety and FPE remained
significant upon controlling for positive affect, and vice versa (all partial rs > |.13|, all ps < .01).5 The relationships between PPF/PNF and
positive affect also remained significant upon controlling for FNE (both
partial rs > .18, both ps < .001), although the relationship
between PNF and FNE did not remain significant upon controlling for positive
affect (partial r = -.09, p = .10).
Lastly, follow-up analyses were conducted to examine
whether fears of evaluation accounted for unique variance in social anxiety
above and beyond that accounted for by preferences for social feedback, and
vice versa. Specifically, four hierarchical regression equations were tested. For
the first two equations, the PPF and PNF subscales of the FSQ-S-D were entered
in the first step, and the FPES and BFNE-S scores were entered in the second
step, with the SPS total score and the SIAS-S score as the criterion variables.
Both FPE and FNE significantly improved (all ps < .001 for both predictors in Step 2 of both equations) the
prediction of social anxiety above and beyond PPF and PNF (both R2 Ds > .38, both Fs > 137.95, both ps < .001). For the next two hierarchical
regression equations, FPES and BFNE-S scores were entered in the first step,
and scores on the PPF and PNF subscales of the FSQ-S-D were entered in the
second step, with SPS total scores and SIAS-S scores as the criterion variables.
Prediction of SPS scores was significantly improved by inclusion of PPF and PNF
in the second step (R2 D =
.02, F = 5.66, p = .004); PPF was a significant unique predictor (p = .02), but PNF was not (p = .82). Prediction of SIAS-S scores
was not significantly improved by inclusion of either PPF or PNF (both ps > .27).6
Discussion
The purposes of
the present study were to test several hypotheses related to fear of evaluation
in social anxiety, as well as to replicate the two-factor fear of evaluation model
originally reported by Weeks et al. (2008a).
Several analyses were conducted to compare and contrast FPE and FNE within
the context of various social anxiety-relevant constructs. Given that previous findings (Weeks et al., 2008a; 2008b)
suggested that social anxiety relates to fears of both positive and negative
evaluation, we expected that FPE and FNE would exhibit similar relationships with social anxiety-related
constructs. Additional analyses were conducted to provide information
about the relationships of FPE and FNE to several discriminant constructs.
All hypotheses in
the present study received support. First, the two-factor fear of evaluation
model originally reported by Weeks and colleagues (2008a) successfully
cross-validated and demonstrated superior fit relative to an alternative
single-factor model. These findings corroborate the original position of Weeks
et al. that fears of positive and negative evaluation are distinct constructs.
That these constructs were highly correlated at the latent level provides further
support for a higher-order fear of evaluation factor.
In line with
previous findings that social anxiety is characterized by high levels of
negative affect and low levels of positive affect (Brown et al., 1998), FPE and
FNE both related positively to social interaction-specific trait negative
affect and negatively to social interaction-specific trait positive affect. These
relationships remained robust to partialling out the alternative fear of
evaluation (although FNE related more strongly than FPE to negative affect). In
addition, FPE and FNE both related positively to submissive behaviors and
negatively to social self-rankings; indeed, both evaluative fears accounted for
unique variance in these constructs.
The present study
also provided support for the distinction between FPE/FNE and several thematically-related
discriminant constructs. First, FPE and FNE each related more strongly to fear
of public scrutiny and social interaction anxiety than did fear of success. Second,
CFA revealed that FPE, FNE, preference for negative social feedback, and
preference for positive social feedback were factorially distinct. Importantly,
the relationship between FPE and FNE was more than twice the strength of any of
the relationships between either of the fear of evaluation factors and the
feedback-preference factors, providing additional support for the distinction
of FPE and FNE from preferences for positive/negative social feedback. Nevertheless,
examination of these latter correlations is revealing. FPE correlated
negatively with a preference for positive feedback, whereas FNE correlated
negatively with a preference for negative social feedback. In addition, FPE
also correlated negatively with a preference for negative feedback. Thus,
individuals endorsing higher levels of FPE preferred not to receive feedback/be
evaluated in general, regardless of the nature of the feedback. FNE, on the
other hand, was more specifically related to a preference for negative
feedback.
The present findings
have implications for the theoretical conceptualization of social anxiety. Specifically,
consistent with accumulating
findings in the literature which highlight a general relationship between
social anxiety and diminished/impaired positive psychological experiences (e.g.,
Gilboa-Schechtman et al., 2000; Kashdan, 2007), our findings suggest that fears
of both positive and negative evaluation are associated with tendencies to
experience decreased positive affect and increased negative affect while interacting
with others. FPE may result in decreased positive affect/increased negative
affect in response to positive social feedback because of concerns about having
caused others to develop an overall
impression of oneself that is socially threatening to more dominant others
(i.e., “too good”), whereas FNE
may result in decreased positive affect/increased negative affect in response
to negative social feedback due to concerns of having caused others to develop an overall impression of oneself as
being unworthy of social investments (i.e., “bad/not good enough”); both of
these aversive social impressions carry the threat of social exclusion/rejection.
Moreover, psycho-evolutionary accounts propose that
social anxiety is a potentially adaptive mechanism which prompts avoidance of
conflict with more (socially) dominant others within competitive social
environments (see Gilbert, 2001). Such accounts are consistent with previous
findings of positive relationships between social anxiety and both social
comparison and submissive behavioral tendencies (e.g., Schneier et al., 2006). Likewise,
the present findings suggest that fears of both positive and negative
evaluation are uniquely associated with decreased social self-rankings and
increased behavioral submissiveness (as assessed via self-report). Thus, FPE
and FNE are distinctly tied to cognitive and behavioral responses to social
threat which could be adaptive in facilitating avoidance of conflict/social
exclusion within the context of socially-competitive environments.
The present findings also provide information
regarding relationships between social anxiety and several constructs which had
not previously been extensively examined in relation to social anxiety. For example, given that fear of success, the
disposition to become anxious about achieving success because of expectations
of negative consequences of succeeding, correlated significantly (albeit
modestly) with social anxiety and FPE/FNE in the present sample, future studies
examining the relationship between social anxiety and fear of success/achievement
motivation appear warranted. Moreover, FPE was distinct from tendencies to
prefer negative social feedback/to find positive social feedback to be
discordant with one’s own self-image and therefore reject it, and FNE was found
to be distinct from tendencies to prefer positive social feedback/to find
negative social feedback to be discordant with one’s own self-image.
The negative latent correlations of the fear of
evaluation factors and the preference for social feedback factors suggest that FPE
and FNE may jointly be associated with an overall desire to not receive social
feedback/be evaluated at all. The present findings are consistent with the
original position of Weeks and colleagues (2008a), in suggesting that socially anxious
individuals may attach fundamental importance to remaining inconspicuous, as either positive or
negative appraisals could result in the experience of anxiety. This is
consistent with the finding that PPF and PNF each related negatively to fear of
public scrutiny and social interaction anxiety in the present study.
Intriguingly, both PPF and PNF related positively to social interaction
specific-positive affect and social self-rankings but did not relate
significantly to social interaction specific-negative affect. Although these
correlational findings preclude causal interpretations, it is interesting to
speculate that individuals who tend to generally feel “good” (i.e., to
experience positive affect) while in social situations and who view themselves
positively in comparison to others may tend to have a greater overall interest
in receiving social feedback. Such individuals may have an overall positive and
stable mental representation of the
self (see Rapee & Heimberg, 1997) and may therefore be less sensitive
to criticism from others. Perhaps these individuals continue to view themselves
positively/experience positive emotions despite potential receipt of negative (or
positive) feedback from others; given that these individuals would not be concerned
that social feedback could adversely impact their self-image, there would be no
aversive consequence to learning what others think of them. In contrast,
individuals who do not tend to feel “good” in social situations, and/or who
view themselves less positively in comparison to others, may tend to have a
social self-image which is less stable/more susceptible to distortion via
external feedback. Furthermore, both preferences for feedback related
negatively to submissive behavior tendencies and fear of success.
Thus, PPF and PNF related similarly to all constructs assessed
in the present study, but these relationships were distinct from those relationships
found between social anxiety/fear of evaluation and the other comparison constructs,
and this pattern of relationships was not attributable to overlap between
preferences for social feedback, social anxiety, fear of evaluation, and
positive affect. The distinct pattern of relationships across these constructs provides
additional support for the separation between fears of positive/negative
evaluation and preferences for positive/negative social feedback as cognitive
facets of social anxiety. In addition, the strong latent relationship between preferences
for positive and negative feedback suggests that a higher order preference for social feedback factor
may be present, but evaluation of that possibility awaits further research.
Lastly,
hierarchical regression analyses revealed that FPE and FNE accounted for
unique variance of social anxiety above and beyond that already accounted for
by preferences for positive and negative feedback. In addition, PPF (but not
PNF) accounted for unique variance of public scrutiny fear above and beyond FPE
and FNE, although neither PPF nor PNF significantly improved prediction of
social interaction anxiety. These findings support the potential roles of FPE
and FNE in the maintenance of social anxiety, as well as that of PPF with
respect to maintaining fear of public scrutiny. The present findings, as well as those reported previously
by Valentiner and colleagues (2008), suggest that continued examination
of preferences for social feedback and their relations to social anxiety are an
important area of future research.
Several limitations to the present study must be
acknowledged. First, the present data were obtained in undergraduate samples.
Although our findings provide support for all hypotheses in the present study,
examining the generalizability of these findings to clinical samples is an
important next step in testing the relationships of fears of evaluation to social
anxiety. Second, it is important to extend the study of fears of evaluation
through the inclusion of multimethod data sources, including
clinician-administered measures, as well as behavioral and physiological indicators,
of social anxiety.
References
Alden, L. E., Mellings, T. M. B., & Laposa, J. M. (2004). Framing
social information and generalized social phobia. Behaviour Research and
Therapy, 42, 585–600.
Allan, S., & Gilbert, P. (1995). A social comparison scale:
Psychometric properties and relationship to psychopathology. Personality and Individual Differences, 19, 293-299.
Arbuckle, J.L. (2005). Amos
(Version 6) [Computer Program]. Chicago: SPSS.
Bentler, P. M. (1990). Fit indexes, Lagrange
multipliers, constraint changes and incomplete data in structural models. Multivariate Behavioral Research, 25, 163-172.
Brown, T.A., Chorpita, B.F., & Barlow,
D.H. (1998). Structural relationships among dimensions of the DSM-IV anxiety
and mood disorders and dimensions of negative affect, positive affect, and
autonomic arousal. Journal of Abnormal
Psychology, 107, 179-192.
Bruch, M.A., Gorsky, J.M., Collins, T.M., & Berger, P.A. (1989).
Shyness and sociability reexamined: A multicomponent analysis. Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, 57, 904-915.
Buss, D.M., & Craik, K.H. (1986). Acts,
dispositions, and clinical assessment: The psychopathology of everyday conduct.
Clinical Psychology Review, 6,
387-406.
Clark, D.M., & Wells, A. (1995). A cognitive model of social phobia.
In R.G. Heimberg, M.R. Liebowitz, D.A. Hope, & F.R. Schneier (Eds.), Social phobia: Diagnosis, assessment, and
treatment (pp. 69-93). New York: Guilford Press.
Cohen, J. (1988). Statistical
power analysis for the behavioral sciences (2nd ed.). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Coles, M.E., Turk, C.L., Heimberg, R.G., & Fresco, D.M. (2001). Effects of varying levels of anxiety within
social situations: Relationship to memory perspective and attributions in
social phobia. Behaviour Research and
Therapy, 39, 651-665.
Gelbort, K.R., & Winer, J.L. (1985). Fear of success and fear of
failure: A multitrait-multimethod validation study. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 48, 1009-1014.
Gilbert, P. (2001). Evolution and social anxiety: The role of attraction,
social competition, and social hierarchies. The
Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 24, 723-751.
Gilbert, P., & Allan, S. (1994). Assertiveness, submissive behaviour
and social comparison. British Journal of
Clinical Psychology, 33, 295-306.
Gilboa-Schechtman, E., Franklin, M.E., & Foa, E.B. (2000). Anticipated
reactions to social events: Differences among individuals with generalized
social phobia, obsessive compulsive disorder, and nonanxious controls. Cognitive Therapy and Research, 24, 731-746.
Hackman, A., Surawy, C., & Clark, D.M. (1998). Seeing yourself
through others’ eyes: A study of spontaneously occurring images in social
phobia. Behavioural and Cognitive
Psychotherapy, 26, 3-12.
Heimberg, R. G., Mueller, G. P., Holt, C. S., Hope, D. A., &
Liebowitz, M. R. (1992). Assessment of anxiety in social interaction and being
observed by others: The Social Interaction Anxiety Scale and the Social Phobia
Scale. Behavior Therapy, 23, 53-73.
Hope, D.A., & Heimberg, R.G. (1988). Public and private
self-consciousness and social phobia. Journal
of Personality Assessment, 52, 626-639.
Horley, K., Williams, L.M.,
Gonsalvez, C., & Gordon, E. (2004). Face to face: Visual scanpath evidence
for abnormal processing of facial expressions in social phobia. Psychiatry Research, 127, 43-53.
Horner, M. (1969). Fail: Bright women. Psychology Today, 3, 36-38.
Hu, L., & Bentler, P. M. (1999). Cutoff
criteria for fit indexes in covariance structure analysis: Conventional
criteria versus new alternatives. Structural
Equation Modeling, 6, 1–55.
Hughes, A.A., Heimberg, R.G., Coles, M.E., Gibb, B.E., Liebowitz, M.R.,
& Schneier, F.R. (2006). Relations of the factors of the tripartite model
of anxiety and depression to types of social anxiety. Behaviour Research and
Therapy, 44, 1629-1641.
Jones, W.H., Briggs, S.R., & Smith, T.G. (1986). Shyness:
conceptualization and measurement. Journal
of Personality and Social Psychology, 51, 629-639.
Kashdan, T.B. (2007). Social anxiety spectrum and diminished positive
experiences: Theoretical synthesis and meta-analysis. Clinical Psychology Review, 27, 348-365.
Leary, M.R. (1983). A brief version of the Fear of Negative Evaluation
Scale. Personality and Social Psychology
Bulletin, 9, 371-375.
Leary, M.R., & Kowalski, R.M. (1995). Social anxiety. New York: Guilford.
Maner, J.K., Miller, S.L.,
Schmidt, N.B., & Eckel, L.A. (2008). Submitting to defeat: Social
anxiety, dominance threat, and decrements in testosterone. Psychological Science, 19, 764-768.
Mansell, W., & Clark, D.M. (1999). How do I appear to others? Social
anxiety and processing of the observable self. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 37, 419-434.
Mattick, R. P., & Clarke, J. C. (1998). Development and validation of
measures of social phobia scrutiny fear and social interaction anxiety. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 36, 455-470.
Meltzer, J.N., & Conroy, D.E. (2004).
Structural validity of the Fear of Success Scale. Measurement in Physical Education and Exercise Science, 8, 89-108.
Meng, X. L., Rosenthal, R., & Rubin, D. B.
(1992). Comparing correlated correlation coefficients. Psychological Bulletin, 111, 172-175.
Miller, J.R. (1994). Fear of success:
Psychodynamic implications. Journal of
the American Academy of Psychoanalysis, 22, 129-136.
Monahan, L., Kuhn, D., & Shaver, P.
(1974). Intrapsychic versus cultural explanations of the “fear of success”
motive. Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, 29, 60-64.
Rapee, R.M., & Heimberg, R.G. (1997).
A cognitive-behavioral model of anxiety in social phobia. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 35, 741-756.
Rodebaugh, T.L., Woods, C.M., & Heimberg, R.G. (2007). The reverse of
social anxiety is not always the opposite: The reverse-scored items of the
Social Interaction Anxiety Scale do not belong. Behavior Therapy, 38, 192-206.
Rodebaugh, T.L., Woods, C.M., Thissen, D.M., Heimberg, R.G., Chambless,
D.L., & Rapee, R.M. (2004). More
information from fewer questions: The factor structure and item properties of
the original and Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation Scale. Psychological Assessment, 16, 169-181.
Schneier, F.R., Heimberg,
R.G., Belzer, K., & Liebowitz, M.R. (2006). Submissive behavior and social comparison in social anxiety disorder. Unpublished manuscript.
Schuster, D.B. (1955). On the fear of
success. Psychiatric Quarterly, 29, 412-420.
Steiger, J.H., & Lind, J.C. (1980,
May). Statistically-based tests for the number of common factors. Paper
presented at the annual meeting of the Psychometric Society, Iowa City, IA.
Swann, W.B. (1983). Self-verification: Bringing
social reality into harmony with the self. In J. Suls & A.G. Greenwald
(Eds.), Social psychological perspectives
on the self (Vol. 2, pp. 33-66). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
Swann, W.B. (1990). To be adored or to be
known? The interplay of self-enhancement and self-verification. In T. Higgins
& R.M. Sorrentino (Eds.), Handbook of
motivation and cognition: Foundations of social behavior (Vol. 2, pp.
408-448). New York: Guilford.
Tresemer, D. (1976). The cumulative record
of research on “fear of success”. Sex
Roles, 2, 217-236.
Tucker, L. R., & Lewis, C. (1973). A
reliability coefficient for maximum likelihood factor analysis. Psychometrika,
38, 1-10.
Valentiner, D.P., Renner, K.A., & Smith, S.A. (2008). Social
self-esteem and a preference for negative feedback about one’s social value:
Examining the applicability of self verification theory to social anxiety. Manuscript submitted for review.
Wallace, S.T., & Alden,
L.E. (1995). Social anxiety and standard setting following social success or
failure. Cognitive Therapy and Research,
19, 613-631.
Wallace, S.T., & Alden,
L.E. (1997). Social phobia and positive social events: The price of success. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 106, 416-424.
Watson, D., Clark, L.A., &
Tellegen, A. (1988). Development and validation of brief measures of positive
and negative affect: The PANAS scales. Journal
of Personality and Social Psychology, 54, 1063-1070.
Weeks, J. W., Heimberg, R. G.,
Fresco, D. M., Hart, T. A., Turk, C. L., Schneier, F. R., & Liebowitz, M.
R. (2005). Empirical validation and psychometric evaluation of the Brief Fear
of Negative Evaluation Scale in patients with social anxiety disorder. Psychological Assessment, 17, 179-190.
Weeks, J.W., Heimberg, R.G., & Rodebaugh, T.L. (2008a). The Fear of
Positive Evaluation Scale: Assessing a proposed cognitive component of social
anxiety disorder. Journal of Anxiety
Disorders, 22, 44-55.
Weeks, J.W., Heimberg, R.G., Rodebaugh, T.L., & Norton, P.J. (2008b).
Exploring the relationship between fear of positive evaluation and social
anxiety. Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 22,
386-400.
Weeks, J.W., Norton, P.J., & Heimberg, R.G. (in press). Exploring the
latent structure of two cognitive components of social anxiety: Taxometric
analyses of fears of negative and positive evaluation. Depression and Anxiety.
Zuckerman, M., & Allison, S.N. (1976). An objective measure of fear
of success: Construction and validation. Journal
of Personality Assessment, 40, 422-430.
Author Notes
Justin W. Weeks,
Tejal A. Jakatdar, and Richard G. Heimberg, Adult Anxiety Clinic of Temple,
Department of Psychology, Temple University.
Justin W. Weeks is now at the Department of Psychology, Ohio University,
Athens, OH.
Portions of this
paper were presented at the annual meeting of the Association for Behavioral
and Cognitive Therapies, Philadelphia, PA, November, 2007.
Correspondence
concerning this article should be addressed to Richard G. Heimberg, Department
of Psychology, Temple University, Weiss Hall, 1701 North 13th Street,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19122-6085, or by electronic mail to heimberg@temple.edu.
Footnotes
1 Because all items included in the BFNE
and SIAS were administered in the current study, it was possible to determine
whether the use of straightforward items only influenced our results. All analyses were repeated using
the BFNE and SIAS total scores, and findings were substantively identical to
the results based on straightforward items only. Details of these analyses are
available upon request.
2 Two participants
did not report their gender.
3 In addition, to
fully examine the possibility that a superior alternative factor solution for
the FSQ-S-D might exist, a principal components analysis was conducted using
promax rotation, implemented using SPSS 16.0 for Windows. All eighteen FSQ-S-D items
were entered. A scree plot indicated that two factors should be extracted. The
first factor (PPF) had an eigenvalue of 11.77 and accounted for 65.4% of the
variance, with item loadings ranging from 0.79 to 0.90; the second factor (PNF)
had an eigenvalue of 1.81 and accounted for 10.04% of the variance, with item
loadings ranging from 0.30 to 0.92. Thus, the
obtained exploratory factor analytic results corroborated our CFA findings
regarding the FSQ-S-D.
4 In
addition, we attempted to compare the hypothesized confirmatory structural
model consisting of four correlated, latent factors (i.e., FPE, FNE, preference
for negative feedback, and preference for positive feedback) to an alternative
model with these same four latent factors defining a higher order factor.
However, upon testing this model in the present sample, the solution did not
converge properly.
5 The
only exception in this case was the non-significant relationship between PPF
and social interaction anxiety (SIAS-S scores) upon controlling for positive
affect (partial r = -.07, p = .19).
6 The
full results of these follow-up analyses are available upon request, but they are
not included here to preserve space.
Table 1: Means and Standard Deviations for All Study Measures
|
Measure
|
M
|
SD
|
|
Fear of Positive Evaluation Scale
|
24.42
|
13.00
|
|
Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation
Scale – Straightforward items
|
19.95
|
7.25
|
|
Social Phobia Scale
|
18.83
|
13.91
|
|
Social Interaction Anxiety Scale
– Straightforward items
|
20.84
|
12.84
|
|
Positive and Negative Affect
Scale – Positive subscale
|
34.51
|
6.63
|
|
Positive and Negative Affect
Scale – Negative subscale
|
21.99
|
7.45
|
|
Submissive Behavior Scale
|
25.58
|
9.02
|
|
Social
Comparison Rating Scale
|
61.53
|
17.76
|
|
Fear of Success
Scale
|
24.28
|
4.07
|
|
Feedback
Seeking Questionnaire-Social subscale-
Dimensional
format-Preference for Positive Feedback
|
24.82
|
9.58
|
|
Feedback
Seeking Questionnaire-Social subscale-
Dimensional
format-Preference for Negative Feedback
|
21.64
|
9.62
|
Note: Ns vary from 397-420 due to
missing data.
Table 2. Correlations
Among All Study Measures
|
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
|
1.
FPES
|
--
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2.
BFNE-S
|
.42**
|
--
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3.
SPS
|
.56**
|
.53**
|
--
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.
SIAS-S
|
.56**
|
.65**
|
.74**
|
--
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.
PANAS-PA
|
-.21**
|
-.25**
|
-.28**
|
-.41**
|
--
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
6.
PANAS-NA
|
.37**
|
.53**
|
.58**
|
.57**
|
-.27**
|
--
|
|
|
|
|
|
7.
SBS
|
.58**
|
.56**
|
.59**
|
.68**
|
-.33**
|
.42**
|
--
|
|
|
|
|
8.
SCRS
|
-.32**
|
-.36**
|
-.44**
|
-.50**
|
.46**
|
-.36**
|
-.39**
|
--
|
|
|
|
9.
FOSS-S
|
.26**
|
.20**
|
.24**
|
.21**
|
-.22**
|
.20**
|
.14*
|
-.21**
|
--
|
|
|
10. FSQ-S-D-PPF
|
-.19**
|
.02
|
-.19**
|
-.15*
|
.22**
|
-.06
|
-.10
|
.16**
|
-.21**
|
--
|
|
11. FSQ-S-D-PNF
|
-.19**
|
-.13*
|
-.21**
|
-.23**
|
.20**
|
-.08
|
-.17**
|
.16**
|
-.15*
|
.75**
|
Notes: FPES = Fear of Positive
Evaluation Scale; BFNE-S = Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation
Scale-Straightforward items; SPS = Social Phobia Scale; SIAS-S = Social
Interaction Anxiety Scale-Straightforward items; PANAS-PA = Positive and
Negative Affect Schedule-Positive Affect; PANAS-NA = Positive and Negative
Affect Schedule-Negative Affect; SBS = Submissive Behavior Scale; SCRS = Social
Comparison Rating Scale; FOSS-S = Fear of Success Scale-Straightforward items;
FSQ-S-D-PPF = Feedback Seeking Questionnaire-Social subscale-Dimensional
format-Preference for Positive Feedback; FSQ-S-D-PNF = Feedback Seeking
Questionnaire-Social subscale-Dimensional format-Preference for Negative
Feedback. Ns
vary from 396-419 due to missing data.
*p = .01 **p = .001
Table 3: Regression Weights From
Regression Analyses Examining the Prediction of Submissive Behaviors and Social
Self-Rankings (Social Comparison Tendencies) by Fears of Positive and Negative
Evaluation
|
Variable
|
Submissive
Behavior Scale
|
Social
Comparison Rating Scale
|
||||
|
|
Β
|
SE B
|
Beta
|
Β
|
SE B
|
Beta
|
|
FPE
|
.30
|
.03
|
.42
|
-.29
|
.07
|
-0.21
|
|
FNE
|
.48
|
.05
|
.38
|
-.66
|
.12
|
-0.27
|
Notes:
FPE = Fear of Positive Evaluation; FNE = Fear of Negative Evaluation. Adjusted R2 = .45 for submissive
behaviors and .16 for social self-rankings (Social Comparison Rating Scale).
All predictors were significant in both equations, all ps < .001.
Table 4: Latent Correlations Among
Fear of Positive Evaluation, Fear of Negative Evaluation, Preference for
Negative Social Feedback, and Preference for Positive Social Feedback.
|
|
FPE
|
FNE
|
PNF
|
|
FNE
|
.49*
|
--
|
--
|
|
PNF
|
-.20*
|
-.14*
|
--
|
|
PPF
|
-.24*
|
-.04
|
.76*
|
Notes:
FPE = Fear of Positive Evaluation; FNE = Fear of Negative Evaluation; PNF =
Preference for Negative Feedback; PPF = Preference for Positive Feedback. *p < .01.
Figure
Caption
Figure
1. Completely standardized solution of the 2-factor fear of evaluation model.
* p < .01.

Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar