Title of article
Goal Internalization and Outcome Expectancy in Adolescent Anxiety
Author/Authors
Joanne M. Dickson، نويسنده , , Nicholas J. Moberly، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
9
From page
389
To page
397
Abstract
Anxiety has been conceptualized in terms of increased
avoidance motivation and higher expectancies of
undesirable outcomes. However, anxiety research has hitherto
not examined an important qualitative aspect of motivation:
the degree to which reasons for goal pursuit are
experienced as controlling and originating outside the core
self. We asked 70 adolescents (34 boys, 36 girls; aged 16–
18 years) to list their important approach and avoidance
goals, and rate the extent to which they pursued each goal
for intrinsic, identified, introjected and external reasons.
Participants also rated goal importance, expectancies for
goal outcomes, and completed an anxious symptom measure.
Broadly in line with predictions, anxiety was significantly
associated with introjected reasons for pursuing
approach goals and external reasons for pursuing avoidance
goals but not with autonomous reasons for goal pursuit. As
predicted, anxiety was significantly associated with heightened
expectancies of undesirable avoidance goal outcomes,
but not with expectancies for desirable approach goal outcomes.
Results suggest that the salient role of avoidancebased
motivation in anxiety extends to introjected reasons
underlying approach goal pursuit. Our findings point to the
theoretical and clinical importance of addressing controlled
reasons for goal pursuit in adolescent anxiety.
Keywords
Anxiety . Avoidance . Goals . Expectancies .Self-regulation . Motivation
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Record number
829415
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