The role of peers in the development of social anxiety in adolescent girls: a systematic review
The role of peers in the development of social anxiety in adolescent girls: a systematic review
Pathways to social anxiety often reflect a set of complex and interacting factors that include both intrinsic and environmental factors. Theoretical models of social anxiety have highlighted that children and adolescents’ peer experiences can increase risk for social anxiety. This systematic review explored the role of peers in the development of social anxiety in adolescent girls. It aimed to identify peer-related risk factors (i.e., peer acceptance, peer attachment, friendship quality, peer support, and victimization) that place adolescents at risk for social anxiety, and to highlight those that are specific to girls. The findings showed that while low peer acceptance was significantly associated with increased social anxiety for boys and girls, limited close friendships, negative friendship experiences and relational victimization were highlighted as risk factors specific to girls. The review suggested that researchers might usefully start to develop frameworks that capture generic, as well as gender-specific risk for social anxiety in adolescence. These will enable the development of prevention and intervention methods to support girls at increased risk and that focus on improving the quality of peer relationships.
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Pickering, Leanne
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Hadwin, Julie
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Kovshoff, Hanna
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Pickering, Leanne
50a3720a-29c8-40ba-af10-726c94a4d1d9
Hadwin, Julie
a364caf0-405a-42f3-a04c-4864817393ee
Kovshoff, Hanna
82c321ee-d151-40c5-8dde-281af59f2142
Pickering, Leanne, Hadwin, Julie and Kovshoff, Hanna
(2019)
The role of peers in the development of social anxiety in adolescent girls: a systematic review.
Adolescent Research Review, .
(doi:10.1007/s40894-019-00117-x).
Abstract
Pathways to social anxiety often reflect a set of complex and interacting factors that include both intrinsic and environmental factors. Theoretical models of social anxiety have highlighted that children and adolescents’ peer experiences can increase risk for social anxiety. This systematic review explored the role of peers in the development of social anxiety in adolescent girls. It aimed to identify peer-related risk factors (i.e., peer acceptance, peer attachment, friendship quality, peer support, and victimization) that place adolescents at risk for social anxiety, and to highlight those that are specific to girls. The findings showed that while low peer acceptance was significantly associated with increased social anxiety for boys and girls, limited close friendships, negative friendship experiences and relational victimization were highlighted as risk factors specific to girls. The review suggested that researchers might usefully start to develop frameworks that capture generic, as well as gender-specific risk for social anxiety in adolescence. These will enable the development of prevention and intervention methods to support girls at increased risk and that focus on improving the quality of peer relationships.
Text
Final Manuscript_AAR_V3
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Accepted/In Press date: 16 April 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 May 2019
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Local EPrints ID: 430279
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/430279
ISSN: 2363-8346
PURE UUID: 0fdacaf0-12c0-4e22-afd7-9bb67f30c38a
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Date deposited: 24 Apr 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:46
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Author:
Leanne Pickering
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