The impact of shyness on social anxiety among college students: Mediating role of regulatory emotional self-efficacy and resilience
Yue Wang, Yuan Zhao

TL;DR
This study explores how shyness leads to social anxiety in college students, finding that resilience and emotional self-efficacy play key mediating roles.
Contribution
The study identifies resilience as a key mediator and reveals a sequential pathway involving regulatory emotional self-efficacy and resilience in the shyness-social anxiety link.
Findings
Shyness is positively associated with social anxiety.
Resilience significantly mediates the relationship between shyness and social anxiety.
Regulatory emotional self-efficacy indirectly affects social anxiety through resilience.
Abstract
Social anxiety is prevalent among college students, and shyness has been consistently linked to elevated social anxiety. However, the psychological mechanisms underlying this association remain insufficiently understood. This study examined whether regulatory emotional self-efficacy and resilience mediate the association between shyness and social anxiety among Chinese college students. This study employed the Cheek and Buss Shyness Scale, Regulatory Emotional Self-Efficacy Scale, 10-item Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale, and Interaction Anxiousness Scale to survey 1,012 college students from three universities in Shandong, Anhui, and Jiangsu provinces. Pearson correlation analysis and PROCESS Macro Model 6 regression analysis were used to examine the relationships among shyness, regulatory emotional self-efficacy, resilience, and social anxiety. Shyness was positively associated with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes · Resilience and Mental Health · Perfectionism, Procrastination, Anxiety Studies
