社交焦虑者对负面评价更敏感的基础是自我积极信念的降低。

Alexandra K Hopkins, Ray Dolan, Katherine S Button, Michael Moutoussis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

积极的自我信念对幸福感非常重要,它受到社会交往中他人对我们评价的影响。对自我信念的机制解释大多依赖于联想学习模型。这些模型能解释选择行为,但不能解释困扰社交焦虑症患者的明确信念。它们也不能解释自我模式,而根据心理学研究,自我模式是脆弱性的基础。在这里,我们对社交焦虑的核心症状--害怕负面评价(FNE)--的不同个体,比较了基于信念的社交评价计算模型和联想计算模型。我们采用了一种新颖的分析方法--"临床信息模型拟合",以确定 FNE 症状得分对模型参数的影响。我们发现,高 FNE 参与者更容易从有关自己的负面反馈中学习,表现为更高的自我否定学习率。最重要的是,我们提供的证据表明,这种偏差是由于对自我积极属性的总体信念降低所造成的。研究对象同样可以用基于信念的模型或联想模型来描述,但模型可能性的巨大个体差异表明,有些人更依赖于联想(无模型),而另一些人则更依赖于信念引导的策略。我们的研究结果具有重要的治疗意义,因为积极的信念激活可能会被用来专门调节学习。作者总结:了解我们如何形成并保持积极的自我信念,对于理解社交焦虑等疾病是如何出错的至关重要。社交焦虑症患者丧失积极的自我信念,尤其是在人际交往中,被认为与我们如何整合从他人那里获得的评价信息有关。我们将这种社交信息整合归结为一个学习问题,并询问人们如何了解别人是否认可自己。因此,我们要阐明为什么在相同的信息下,积极评价的减少只表现在自己身上,而不表现在未知的他人身上。我们使用一种新颖的计算建模方法研究了这种学习的机制,比较了将学习过程视为一系列刺激反应关联的模型和将学习视为更新对自我(或他人)的信念的模型。我们的研究表明,这两种模型都很好地描述了这一过程,而且社交焦虑症状较重的人从有关自我的负面信息中学到的东西更多。最重要的是,我们提供的证据表明,当个体被置于社会评价情境中时,被激活的积极属性数量会减少。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

A Reduced Self-Positive Belief Underpins Greater Sensitivity to Negative Evaluation in Socially Anxious Individuals.

A Reduced Self-Positive Belief Underpins Greater Sensitivity to Negative Evaluation in Socially Anxious Individuals.

A Reduced Self-Positive Belief Underpins Greater Sensitivity to Negative Evaluation in Socially Anxious Individuals.

A Reduced Self-Positive Belief Underpins Greater Sensitivity to Negative Evaluation in Socially Anxious Individuals.

Positive self-beliefs are important for well-being, and are influenced by how others evaluate us during social interactions. Mechanistic accounts of self-beliefs have mostly relied on associative learning models. These account for choice behaviour but not for the explicit beliefs that trouble socially anxious patients. Neither do they speak to self-schemas, which underpin vulnerability according to psychological research. Here, we compared belief-based and associative computational models of social-evaluation, in individuals that varied in fear of negative evaluation (FNE), a core symptom of social anxiety. We used a novel analytic approach, 'clinically informed model-fitting', to determine the influence of FNE symptom scores on model parameters. We found that high-FNE participants learn more easily from negative feedback about themselves, manifesting in greater self-negative learning rates. Crucially, we provide evidence that this bias is underpinned by an overall reduced belief about self-positive attributes. The study population could be characterized equally well by belief-based or associative models, however large individual differences in model likelihood indicated that some individuals relied more on an associative (model-free), while others more on a belief-guided strategy. Our findings have therapeutic importance, as positive belief activation may be used to specifically modulate learning.

Author summary: Understanding how we form and maintain positive self-beliefs is crucial to understanding how things go awry in disorders such as social anxiety. The loss of positive self-belief in social anxiety, especially in inter-personal contexts, is thought to be related to how we integrate evaluative information that we receive from others. We frame this social information integration as a learning problem and ask how people learn whether someone approves of them or not. We thus elucidate why the decrease in positive evaluations manifests only for the self, but not for an unknown other, given the same information. We investigated the mechanics of this learning using a novel computational modelling approach, comparing models that treat the learning process as series of stimulusresponse associations with models that treat learning as updating of beliefs about the self (or another). We show that both models characterise the process well and that individuals higher in symptoms of social anxiety learn more from negative information specifically about the self. Crucially, we provide evidence that this originates from a reduction in the amount of positive attributes that are activated when the individual is placed in a social evaluative context.

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