Cognitive Therapy of Anxiety Disorders

(sharon) #1
Social Phobia 349

The cognitive basis of anticipatory social anxiety will primarily involve effort-
ful, elaborative processes as the individual intentionally thinks about the approaching
social event. Preexisting maladaptive social self- schemas will be activated that involve
beliefs of perceived social inadequacy, the distressing nature of anxiety, the imagined
negative judgments of others, and the inability to meet expected social performance
standards. The negative social self- schemas will tend to dominate the socially anxious
person’s thinking of the impending social event. His thinking will selectively focus on
the possible threatening aspects of the situation. Gerald, for example, would think
about people looking at him and trying to initiate conversations with him which he
interpreted as highly threatening. The possibility of acceptance by others and posi-
tive social performance were completely discounted. At the anticipatory phase socially
anxious individuals also evaluate themselves as vulnerable and incapable of meeting
the perceived social performance expectations of the impending task. Memory of past
social situations, especially those similar to the future event, will be biased for retrieval
of experiences that involved intense social anxiety and embarrassment, leading to an
exaggerated expectation of threat and personal vulnerability in the anticipated social
event. This will initiate a worry process as the individual becomes preoccupied with
the threat and danger of the approaching social event. The expected probability and
severity of a negative outcome will become magnified the longer the individual is stuck
in this anxious ruminative process. Gerald experienced intense worry when a meeting
was scheduled at work. All he could think about was the terrible anxiety he felt in past
meetings and the relief experienced when he was able to find an excuse for not attend-
ing.

(preferred outcome)


Contextual Cues

Effortful Processing
uInterpretative
threat bias
uPersonal
vulnerability
appraisal
uBiased memory
retrieval
uWorry

Heightened Anxiety
and
Strong Urge to Avoid

Anticipatory Phase Situational Exposure

Heightened Anxiety and Exposure to

Provoking Situation

AUTOMATIC
ACTIVATION OF
MALADAPTIVE SOCIAL
SELF-SCHEMAS OF
THREAT

Secondary,
Elaborative
Reappraisal

Outcome
Elevated anxiety,
even panic, disrupted
social performance,
and urge to escape

Postevent
Processing

Biased recall
and
interpretation of
past social
performance
and outcome

Heightened self-
focus attention

Ineffective
safety
Automatic behaviors
Inhibitory
Behaviors Shame and Feelings of
Embarrassment

figure 9.1. Cognitive model of social phobia.
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