Title of article
Shyness: relationship to social phobia and other psychiatric disorders
Author/Authors
Nancy A. Heiser، نويسنده , , Samuel M. Turner، نويسنده , , Deborah C. Beidel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
13
From page
209
To page
221
Abstract
The relationship between shyness, social phobia and other psychiatric disorders was examined. The prevalence of social phobia was significantly higher among shy persons (18%) compared with non-shy persons (3%). However, the majority of shy individuals (82%) were not socially phobic. A significant and positive correlation was found between the severity of shyness and the presence of social phobia, but the data suggest that social phobia is not merely severe shyness. Social phobia was also positively and moderately correlated with introversion and neuroticism. Thus, shy persons with social phobia were shyer, more introverted, and more neurotic than other shy people, but none of these factors was sufficient to distinguish shy persons with social phobia from those without social phobia. The proportion of the shy group with psychiatric diagnoses other than social phobia was significantly higher than among the non-shy group, indicating that various diagnostic categories are prominent among the shy. The results are discussed in terms of the overlap in shyness and social phobia and the relationship of shyness to other psychiatric diagnoses and personality dimensions.
Journal title
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Record number
569595
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