Academic Level at Time of Presentation

Junior

Major

Psychology

Minor

Biology

2nd Student Academic Level at Time of Presentation

Faculty/Staff

List all Project Mentors & Advisor(s)

Patrick Cushen, PhD

Presentation Format

Poster Presentation

Abstract/Description

Disruptive cognitive biases are often problems for people with anxiety-related disorders. For those individuals with social anxiety, one common bias is negative post-event rumination. This bias involves people with social anxiety remembering and distorting past experiences by focusing on negative details and perceptions. This bias may also be key to maintaining social anxiety as it feeds into the cycle of distress associated with social experiences. Another factor that may relate to a person’s likelihood of demonstrating this bias is their level of perfectionism. Two aspects of perfectionism may be related to post-event rumination: socially prescribed perfectionism (thinking that others expect perfection from you) and perfectionistic self-presentation (expecting perfection from one’s self). The goal of the current study is to investigate the relationships between different aspects of perfectionism, social anxiety, and post-event rumination. The study asks participants to remember a specific event that led to feelings of anxiety or discomfort. They then complete self-report questionnaires about multiple variables including their post-event ruminations about that event, social anxiety, social phobia, and multiple dimensions of perfectionism. Results will investigate whether the different forms of perfectionism mediate the relationship between negative post-event rumination and social anxiety.

Spring Scholars Week 2020 Event

Psychology: Projects In-Progress

Included in

Psychology Commons

Share

COinS
 

Exploring relationships between perfectionism, social anxiety, and post-event rumination

Disruptive cognitive biases are often problems for people with anxiety-related disorders. For those individuals with social anxiety, one common bias is negative post-event rumination. This bias involves people with social anxiety remembering and distorting past experiences by focusing on negative details and perceptions. This bias may also be key to maintaining social anxiety as it feeds into the cycle of distress associated with social experiences. Another factor that may relate to a person’s likelihood of demonstrating this bias is their level of perfectionism. Two aspects of perfectionism may be related to post-event rumination: socially prescribed perfectionism (thinking that others expect perfection from you) and perfectionistic self-presentation (expecting perfection from one’s self). The goal of the current study is to investigate the relationships between different aspects of perfectionism, social anxiety, and post-event rumination. The study asks participants to remember a specific event that led to feelings of anxiety or discomfort. They then complete self-report questionnaires about multiple variables including their post-event ruminations about that event, social anxiety, social phobia, and multiple dimensions of perfectionism. Results will investigate whether the different forms of perfectionism mediate the relationship between negative post-event rumination and social anxiety.