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Social Anxiety Disorder

New England Journal of Medicine, 2017
Key Clinical PointsSocial Anxiety Disorder Social anxiety disorder affects up to 13% of the U.S. population and is characterized by an intense fear of social situations in which the person anticipates being evaluated negatively. Social anxiety is associated with an increased risk of other mental disorders, such as depression and substance-use disorder.
Falk, Leichsenring, Frank, Leweke
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SOCIAL ANXIETY DISORDER

Medical Clinics of North America, 2001
In 1990s, it was found that GSAD is more common, more disabling, and more chronic than previously realized. For the first time, there are good data about a range of effective treatment options that can offer these patients substantial relief and protection from their disability.
B A, Raj, D V, Sheehan
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Social anxiety spectrum

European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 2003
The aim of this paper is to provide the prevalence rates of mild, moderate and severe symptoms of social anxiety in a sample of high school students and to analyze gender differences and associated impairment levels within these three levels of severity. Five hundred and twenty students were assessed with the Social Anxiety Spectrum Self-Report (SHY-SR)
DELL'OSSO, LILIANA   +7 more
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Social anxiety.

La Revue du praticien, 2010
Social anxiety disorders are various, frequent and invalidant. Social phobia is characterized by marked and persistent fear of social or performance situations in which embarrassment may occur including, for example, fear of public speaking. In clinical setting, the majority of social phobics report fears of more than one type of social situation ...
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Social Anxiety and Social Facilitation

Psychological Reports, 1979
A measure of social anxiety was used to predict whether 40 college students' performance on a simple task would be socially facilitated or impaired by the presence of an audience.
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Anxiety and Social Explanation: Some Anxieties about Anxiety

Journal of Social History, 1999
Anxiety is invoked as an explanatory device in a wide variety of historical and sociological writing. The general form of such accounts is that the occurrence and timing of some social phenomena is explained by reference to the presence of some elevated state of anxiety which elicits social or political responses by an identifiable group of social ...
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Social Dysfunction and Anxiety

The Journal of Psychology, 1977
A sample of 44 male and female adults, newly admitted to outpatient clinics at a large community mental health center, was given the Denver Community Mental HEALTH Questionnaire on social functioning, the abbreviated version of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory, the Social Readjustment Rating Scale, and the Taylor Manifest Anxiety Scale ...
B, Justice, G, McBee, R, Allen
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Social Anxiety and Stuttering

Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1991
Social anxiety among 110 stutterers was compared with the measures of two control groups (110 social phobic patients and 110 normal persons). Results do not support the notion of social anxiety as an essential part of stuttering.
F W, Kraaimaat   +2 more
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The social anxiety spectrum

Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 2002
Social anxiety disorder is well suited to the spectrum concept because it has trait-like qualities of early onset, chronicity, and no empirically derived threshold that demarcates normal from clinically significant trait social anxiety. Social anxiety disorder has been shown to respond to relatively specific pharmacologic and cognitive-behavioral ...
Franklin R, Schneier   +3 more
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