Cognitive Therapy of Anxiety Disorders

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Vulnerability to Anxiety 113


Hypothesis 11. Heightened Sense of Personal Vulnerability


Highly anxious individuals will exhibit lower self- confidence and greater perceived
helplessness in situations relevant to their selective threats compared to nonanxious
individuals.


Beck et al. (1985, 2005) considered diminished self- confidence and self-doubt an
important aspect of cognitive vulnerability to anxiety. For the person who suffers from
anxiety a self- confidence set is replaced by a vulnerability perspective. When in a vul-
nerability mode, individuals evaluate their own abilities and competence as inadequate
for dealing with a perceived threat. As a result, they become tentative or withdraw
from a situation in a self- protective manner. When a confident attitude is adopted, the
individual focuses on the positives in a situation, minimizes the dangers, and may even
assume a greater sense of personal control than when low self- confidence prevails (Beck
et al., 1985, 2005). Adopting a confident mode increases the probability of success in


Genetic
Predisposition

Biological
Determinants

Developmental
Learning
Experiences

High Negative Affect or
Emotionality Trait Anxiety

High Anxiety
Sensitivity

Sensitivity to
Negative
Evaluation

Diminished
Personal Control

Aversive
Life Events

Hypervalent Threat
Schema Activation

Heightened Sense of
Personal Weakness
and Reduced Safety

State of Anxiety

BROADER
FOCUS

NARROWER
FOCUS

figure 4.1. Cognitive vulnerability model of anxiety.
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