Abstract Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is thought to involve emotional hyper-reactivity and emotion dysregulation. How-ever, the precise nature of the emotion dysregulation in SAD has not been well characterized. In the present study, the Emotion Regulation Interview (ERI) was developed to quantify the frequency and self-efficacy of five emotion regulation strategies specified by Gross’s (Review of General Psychology 2: 271–299, 1998) process model of emotion regulation. Forty-eight individuals with SAD and 33 healthy controls (HCs) were interviewed about responses during (a) a laboratory speech task and (b) two recent social anxiety-evoking situations. Individuals with SAD reported greater use of avoidance and expressive suppression than H...
Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is a pervasive problem associated with debilitating impairments in soc...
Background: It is known that social anxiety disorder (SAD) interferes in a great deal of life areas,...
Emotion regulation has traditionally been studied as an individ-ual phenomenon. Increasingly, howeve...
<p>Recent models of social anxiety disorder emphasise the role of emotion dysregulation; however, th...
Abstract Many psychiatric disorders involve problematic patterns of emotional reactivity and regulat...
Background: Emotion regulation flexibility is a person's tendency to shift their use of emotion regu...
Past research has demonstrated a strong relationship between threat sensitivity and social anxiety; ...
Background: This study explored affect organisation in patients diagnosed with social anxiety disord...
Recently, research has provided support for a moderate, inverse relationship between social anxiety ...
Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) is often associated with fear of negative evaluation but more recently...
Recent research suggests the presence of both common and disorder-specific emotion regulation defici...
Objective: According to the transdiagnostic view, emotion regulation strategies are common among emo...
Background: In healthy individuals, voluntary modification of self-relevance has proven effective in...
Preliminary evidence suggests that the effects of regulating emotion may be moderated by both indivi...
Anxious youth often have trouble regulating negative affect (NA) and tend to over-rely on parents wh...
Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is a pervasive problem associated with debilitating impairments in soc...
Background: It is known that social anxiety disorder (SAD) interferes in a great deal of life areas,...
Emotion regulation has traditionally been studied as an individ-ual phenomenon. Increasingly, howeve...
<p>Recent models of social anxiety disorder emphasise the role of emotion dysregulation; however, th...
Abstract Many psychiatric disorders involve problematic patterns of emotional reactivity and regulat...
Background: Emotion regulation flexibility is a person's tendency to shift their use of emotion regu...
Past research has demonstrated a strong relationship between threat sensitivity and social anxiety; ...
Background: This study explored affect organisation in patients diagnosed with social anxiety disord...
Recently, research has provided support for a moderate, inverse relationship between social anxiety ...
Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) is often associated with fear of negative evaluation but more recently...
Recent research suggests the presence of both common and disorder-specific emotion regulation defici...
Objective: According to the transdiagnostic view, emotion regulation strategies are common among emo...
Background: In healthy individuals, voluntary modification of self-relevance has proven effective in...
Preliminary evidence suggests that the effects of regulating emotion may be moderated by both indivi...
Anxious youth often have trouble regulating negative affect (NA) and tend to over-rely on parents wh...
Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is a pervasive problem associated with debilitating impairments in soc...
Background: It is known that social anxiety disorder (SAD) interferes in a great deal of life areas,...
Emotion regulation has traditionally been studied as an individ-ual phenomenon. Increasingly, howeve...