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Describes the development of a scale to assess individual differences in self-consciousness. Construction of the scale involved testing the 38 initial items with 130 female and 82 male undergraduates. A principal components factor analysis of the data yielded 3 factors accounting for 43% of the variance: Private Self-Consciousness, Public Self-Consciousness, and Social Anxiety. The final version of the scale, which contained 23 items, was administered to several groups of undergraduates (N = 668) to obtain norms, test-retest (2 wks), subscale correlation, and reliability data. Test-retest reliabilities were .84 for the Public Self-Consciousness scale, .79 for the Private Self-Consciousness scale, .73 for the Social Anxiety scale, and .80 for the total score. Public Self-Consciousness correlated moderately with both Private Self-Consciousness and Social Anxiety, while the correlation of Private Self-Consciousness with Social Anxiety fluctuated around zero. No sex differences in scores were observed. Implications for research and therapy are discussed.
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Allan Fenigstein
Kenyon College
Michael F. Scheier
National Institutes of Health
Arnold H. Buss
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
The University of Texas at Austin
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Fenigstein et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d84ee7d2f7327e70ae2e8b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1037/h0076760
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