Publication | Closed Access
Somatic Anxiety Patterns Before, During, and After Giving a Public Speech
31
Citations
32
References
2006
Year
Physiological Stress IndicatorsOral CommunicationPsychiatryArtsPsychologyEmotionSomatic Symptom DisorderSocial SciencesPublic SpeechConversation AnalysisSpeech Anxiety PatternsParalinguisticsSpeech PerceptionAnxiety DisordersPsychopathologySpeech CommunicationNonverbal Communication
This study examined the relationship between public speaking anxiety and physiological stress indicators at four different milestones or stages in the delivery of a public speech. Specifically, public speakers' gastrointestinal body sensations were compared at different times and across different levels of psychological trait anxiety. Results indicated significant differences in both the magnitude and the patterns of somatic responses between high- and low-trait-anxiety groupings. First, as the groups of speakers moved from anticipation to confrontation, their somatic responses changed in opposite directions. Subsequently, high-anxiety speakers reported a significant increase in stress symptoms immediately after the speech had ended, indicating anxious remorse or fear of negative evaluation. These findings provided important new information about speech anxiety patterns, particularly as they differ in high- and low-anxiety speakers.
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