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Journal Article

Citation

Valentiner DP, Skowronski JJ, Mounts NS, Holzman JB. J. Cogn. Psychother. 2017; 31(2): 136-148.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Springer Publishing)

DOI

10.1891/0889-8391.31.2.136

PMID

32755934

Abstract

This study tested a self-verification model of social anxiety in the context of relationship formation during the transition to college. Incoming college freshmen (N = 68) completed measures of social anxiety and social self-esteem at the beginning of college and 10 weeks later. Using sociometric ratings completed 10 weeks later, relational victimization appeared to be a unitary construct and not distinct from physical victimization. Participants with low social self-esteem at Time 1 were subsequently seen as victimized, reported disliking spending time at Time 2 with peers who reported liking them, and reported high social anxiety at Time 2 even in the absence of subsequent victimization. The implications of these results for understanding the role of self-verification processes in the maintenance of self-image and social anxiety are discussed.


Language: en

Keywords

social anxiety; bullying; college transition; peer victimization; relationship formation; self-verification

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