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Rejection sensitivity and the development of social anxiety symptoms during adolescence: A five-year longitudinal study

Rejection sensitivity is a bias toward expecting rejection that can result from negative social experiences and degrade emotional adjustment. In this study, rejection sensitivity was expected to predict patterns of adolescent social anxiety over 5 years when considered alongside other known or expec...

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Published in:International journal of behavioral development 2021-05, Vol.45 (3), p.204-215
Main Authors: Zimmer-Gembeck, Melanie J., Gardner, Alex A., Hawes, Tanya, Masters, Mitchell R., Waters, Allison M., Farrell, Lara J.
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description Rejection sensitivity is a bias toward expecting rejection that can result from negative social experiences and degrade emotional adjustment. In this study, rejection sensitivity was expected to predict patterns of adolescent social anxiety over 5 years when considered alongside other known or expected risk and protective factors: peer rejection (peer-reported), emotion dysregulation, self-worth, temperament (parent-reported), female gender, and grade. Participants were 377 Australian students (45% boys; 79% White, 15% Asian) aged 10 to 13 years (M = 12.0, SD = .90) and their parents (84%) who completed seven repeated surveys across 5 years. In an unconditional latent growth model, social anxiety symptoms had a significant quadratic pattern of growth, with symptoms increasing about midway into the study when adolescents were age 14, on average. In a model with all predictors, rejection sensitivity was uniquely associated with a higher intercept and a more pronounced quadratic growth pattern of social anxiety symptoms. Other predictors of growth in symptoms were the temperamental trait of negativity affectivity and emotion dysregulation; negative affectivity was associated with a higher intercept and a more pronounced quadratic pattern, and emotion dysregulation was associated with a higher intercept and a less pronounced quadratic pattern. Gender was associated with the intercept, with girls higher in symptoms than boys.
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subjects Adolescent girls
Adolescents
Anxiety Disorders
At Risk Persons
Bias
Emotional Adjustment
Emotional regulation
Foreign Countries
Gender
Gender Differences
Growth models
Instructional Program Divisions
Longitudinal studies
Negative emotions
Peer Influence
Peer rejection
Personality Traits
Predictor Variables
Protective factors
Rejection (Psychology)
Self Concept
Selfworth
Social anxiety
Social development
Social experiences
Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
Temperament
title Rejection sensitivity and the development of social anxiety symptoms during adolescence: A five-year longitudinal study
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