# Sex differences in music performance anxiety: the role of self/other-scrutiny and self-efficacy

**Authors:** Hua Wu, Zhen Li, Jian Sun

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2026.1746532 · 2026-01-28

## TL;DR

Women report higher music performance anxiety than men, with self-scrutiny being a key factor in explaining this difference.

## Contribution

The study identifies self-scrutiny, other-scrutiny, and self-efficacy as mediators of sex differences in music performance anxiety.

## Key findings

- Females reported significantly higher music performance anxiety than males.
- Self-scrutiny explained 36.0% of the sex-MPA relationship, other-scrutiny 16.3%, and self-efficacy 2.8%.
- The indirect pathway through other-scrutiny and self-efficacy was significant but modest.

## Abstract

Sex differences in music performance anxiety (MPA) remain a persistent concern in both research and practice, yet the mediation mechanisms are not fully understood. Thus, this study examined whether self-scrutiny, other-scrutiny, and self-efficacy mediate the relationship between sex and MPA among Chinese choir members.

A cross-sectional online survey was conducted in June 2025 with 774 active participants (27.1% male; mean age = 46.02, SD = 18.19) recruited from four community-based choirs in China. Standardized measures assessed MPA, self-scrutiny, other-scrutiny, and self-efficacy.

Findings indicated that (1) females reported significantly higher MPA than males; (2) Self-scrutiny, other-scrutiny, and self-efficacy significantly mediated the sex-MPA association, with effect sizes of 36.0%, 16.3%, and 2.8%, respectively. (3) Serial mediation via self-scrutiny and self-efficacy was not supported, whereas the indirect pathway through other-scrutiny and self-efficacy was significant, though modest in size (1.0%).

These findings highlight that evaluative cognitions, especially self-scrutiny, play a central role in explaining sex disparities in MPA, whereas self-efficacy exerts a limited contribution. In the Chinese choral context, where collective and public performance accentuates external evaluation, other-scrutiny may further erode confidence over time. The study underscores the need for interventions that target maladaptive self- and other-focused cognitions, while simultaneously fostering mastery experiences and supportive feedback to strengthen self-efficacy.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** MPA (MESH:D001007)

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12891172/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12891172