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Impaired positive inferential bias in social phobia.

214

Citations

20

References

2000

Year

Abstract

People with social phobia report anticipatory and retrospective judgments about social situations mat appear consistent with a negative interpretative bias. However, it is nut at all clear that biased interpretative inferences are made "on-line:" that is, at the time that ambiguous information is first encountered. In a previous study, volunteers who were anxious about interviews were found to lack the positive on-line inferential bias that was characteristic of nonanxious controls but also failed to show a bias favoring threatening inferences (C. R. Hirsch & A. Mathews. 1997). This ending was confirmed in the present study, in which social phobic patients showed no evidence of making on-line emotional inferences, in contrast with socially nonanxious controls who were again clearly biased in favor of positive inferences. The authors concluded that nonanxious individuals are characterized by a benign on-line inferential bias, but that this is impaired in people with social phobia.

References

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