A recent cognitive model of social phobia suggested that negative self-images may play an important role in maintaining the disorder. To investigate this suggestion, 30 social phobics and 30 non-patient controls were given a semi-structured interview which focused on spontaneously occurring images. Social phobics were significantly more likely than controls to report experiencing images when anxious in social situations. In addition, social phobics' images were significantly more negative and significantly more likely to involve seeing oneself from an observer's perspective. Implications of these findings for the understanding and cognitive treatment of social phobia are discussed
Based on findings from the adult literature, this study examined the role of negative self-images (N...
Social phobics, anxious controls and non-patient controls took part in a brief videotaped conversati...
Observer perspective imagery is hypothesised to have wide ranging deleterious effects in social anxi...
A recent cognitive model of social phobia suggested that negative self-images may play an important ...
Patients with social phobia often experience negative self-images in social situations. The current ...
A recent model [Clark, D. M. and Wells, A. (1995). A cognitive model of social phobia. In R. Heimber...
This study explored perspective taking in social phobics' images of past anxiety-provoking social si...
Cognitive models of social phobia, propose that on entering a social situation individuals with soci...
Ninety individuals with social phobia were randomly assigned to a waitlist control group, a cognitiv...
Current cognitive models (Clark ;Wells, 1995; Rapee ;Heimberg, 1997) emphasise the importance of neg...
Patients with social phobia report experiencing negative images of themselves performing poorly when...
AbstractNegative self-images are a maintaining factor in social phobia. A retrospective study (Hackm...
Cognitive-behavioral models of clinical problems typically postulate a role for the combined effects...
Based on findings from the adult literature, this study examined the role of negative self-images (N...
BACKGROUND: Negative mental imagery is ubiquitous in cognitive models of social anxiety and in the s...
Based on findings from the adult literature, this study examined the role of negative self-images (N...
Social phobics, anxious controls and non-patient controls took part in a brief videotaped conversati...
Observer perspective imagery is hypothesised to have wide ranging deleterious effects in social anxi...
A recent cognitive model of social phobia suggested that negative self-images may play an important ...
Patients with social phobia often experience negative self-images in social situations. The current ...
A recent model [Clark, D. M. and Wells, A. (1995). A cognitive model of social phobia. In R. Heimber...
This study explored perspective taking in social phobics' images of past anxiety-provoking social si...
Cognitive models of social phobia, propose that on entering a social situation individuals with soci...
Ninety individuals with social phobia were randomly assigned to a waitlist control group, a cognitiv...
Current cognitive models (Clark ;Wells, 1995; Rapee ;Heimberg, 1997) emphasise the importance of neg...
Patients with social phobia report experiencing negative images of themselves performing poorly when...
AbstractNegative self-images are a maintaining factor in social phobia. A retrospective study (Hackm...
Cognitive-behavioral models of clinical problems typically postulate a role for the combined effects...
Based on findings from the adult literature, this study examined the role of negative self-images (N...
BACKGROUND: Negative mental imagery is ubiquitous in cognitive models of social anxiety and in the s...
Based on findings from the adult literature, this study examined the role of negative self-images (N...
Social phobics, anxious controls and non-patient controls took part in a brief videotaped conversati...
Observer perspective imagery is hypothesised to have wide ranging deleterious effects in social anxi...