A metacognitive model of social anxiety: Implications for treatment |
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Authors: | Lorne M. Hartman Dr. |
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Affiliation: | Addiction Research Foundation, University of Toronto, Canada |
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Abstract: | This article represents an attempt to clarify questions posed by evidence of varying pathways to change in social anxiety. A new perspective is developed which addresses these questions and, importantly, lays the foundation for an innovative treatment approach. Essentially, social anxiety is construed here as the product of a disorganization in which feelings and cognitions (both conscious and preconscious) about the self, about other people, and about the relations between self and others are organized. Specifically, the socially anxious client experiences others autocentrically: that is, in terms of how the other person perceives, evaluates and affects one's own self. The result is a narrowed capacity for experiencing others. The goal of treatment in the new approach advocated here is to allow the individual to understand, appreciate and share the feelings, thoughts and experience of other people. Therapy is directed toward getting clients out of themselves and into other people. |
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Keywords: | Request for reprints should be addressed to Dr. L.M. Hartman Addiction Research Foundation 33 Russel Street Toronnto Ontario Canada M5 |
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