TY - JOUR
T1 - The behavioral economics of social anxiety disorder reveal a robust effect for interpersonal traits
AU - Rodebaugh, Thomas L.
AU - Tonge, Natasha A.
AU - Weisman, Jaclyn S.
AU - Lim, Michelle H.
AU - Fernandez, Katya C.
AU - Bogdan, Ryan
N1 - Funding Information:
This work supported by R21-MH090308 (NIMH) to Thomas L. Rodebaugh and UL1 RR024992 (NIH) to Washington University. Ryan Bogdan received additional support from the Klingenstein Third Generation and NIH (R01-AG045231; R01-HD083614, U01-AG052564). Thanks to the many research assistants who helped conduct this research, with particular thanks to Andrea Temkin and Marilyn Piccirillo. Thanks also to Tal Yarkoni, who programmed the original task used by Rodebaugh et al. (2013) and consulted on the programming of the latest version. Thanks to Richard Heimberg and Eric Lenze for allowing use of prior data to create priors for Bayesian analyses.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2017/8
Y1 - 2017/8
N2 - Recent evidence suggests that reduced generosity among individuals with social anxiety disorder (SAD) in behavioral economic tasks may result from constraint in changing behavior according to interpersonal contingencies. That is, people with SAD may be slower to be more generous when the situation warrants. Conversely, more global effects on generosity may be related to interpersonal vindictiveness, a dimension only somewhat related to SAD. A total of 133 participants, 73 with the generalized form of SAD, completed self-report instruments and a behavioral economic task with simulated interpersonal (friend, romantic partner, stranger) interactions. In a separate visit, friends (n = 88) also came to the lab and rated participants on vindictiveness. Interpersonal vindictiveness was associated with reduced initial and overall giving to simulated friends. SAD predicted a lack of increased giving to a simulated friend, and attenuated an increase in giving to simulated known versus unknown players compared to participants without SAD. Friend-reported vindictiveness predicted in the same direction as diagnosis. However, the findings for SAD were less robust than those for vindictiveness. SAD is perhaps weakly related to behavioral constraint in economic tasks that simulate interpersonal interactions, whereas vindictiveness is strongly related to lower overall generosity as well as (via friend report) behavioral constraint. Further study is needed to better characterize the construct of vindictiveness. Our findings dovetail with the suggestion that SAD is related to impairment in the proposed affiliation and attachment system, but further suggest that direct study of that system may be more fruitful than focusing on disorders.
AB - Recent evidence suggests that reduced generosity among individuals with social anxiety disorder (SAD) in behavioral economic tasks may result from constraint in changing behavior according to interpersonal contingencies. That is, people with SAD may be slower to be more generous when the situation warrants. Conversely, more global effects on generosity may be related to interpersonal vindictiveness, a dimension only somewhat related to SAD. A total of 133 participants, 73 with the generalized form of SAD, completed self-report instruments and a behavioral economic task with simulated interpersonal (friend, romantic partner, stranger) interactions. In a separate visit, friends (n = 88) also came to the lab and rated participants on vindictiveness. Interpersonal vindictiveness was associated with reduced initial and overall giving to simulated friends. SAD predicted a lack of increased giving to a simulated friend, and attenuated an increase in giving to simulated known versus unknown players compared to participants without SAD. Friend-reported vindictiveness predicted in the same direction as diagnosis. However, the findings for SAD were less robust than those for vindictiveness. SAD is perhaps weakly related to behavioral constraint in economic tasks that simulate interpersonal interactions, whereas vindictiveness is strongly related to lower overall generosity as well as (via friend report) behavioral constraint. Further study is needed to better characterize the construct of vindictiveness. Our findings dovetail with the suggestion that SAD is related to impairment in the proposed affiliation and attachment system, but further suggest that direct study of that system may be more fruitful than focusing on disorders.
KW - Behavioral economics
KW - Interpersonal processes
KW - RDoC
KW - Social anxiety disorder
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85021083948&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.brat.2017.06.003
DO - 10.1016/j.brat.2017.06.003
M3 - Article
C2 - 28645098
AN - SCOPUS:85021083948
SN - 0005-7967
VL - 95
SP - 139
EP - 147
JO - Behaviour Research and Therapy
JF - Behaviour Research and Therapy
ER -