The Brief Social Phobia Scale: A psychometric evaluation

被引:130
作者
Davidson, JRT
Miner, CM
DeVeaughGeiss, J
Tupler, LA
Colket, JT
Potts, NLS
机构
[1] GLAXO WELLCOME PHARMACEUT,DURHAM,NC
[2] MENNINGER PHOENIX,DEPT PSYCHIAT,PHOENIX,AZ
[3] ST JOSEPHS HOSP,PHOENIX,AZ
关键词
D O I
10.1017/S0033291796004217
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
The Brief Social Phobia Scale (BSPS) is an observer-rated scale designed to assess the characteristic symptoms of social phobia, using three subscales - fear, avoidance, and physiological arousal - which may be combined into a total score. Each of 18 BSPS items is anchored to a 5-point rating scale. Psychometric evaluation of the BSPS in a sample of 275 social-phobia patients yielded a high level of reliability and validity. Test-retest reliability was excellent, as was internal consistency. The fear and avoidance subscales demonstrated highly significant correlations with remaining item totals; however, the physiological subscale did not. The BSPS also demonstrated significant relationships with other established scales that assess anxiety and disability, and it proved sensitive to treatment effects in a trial of a 5-HT3 antagonist and placebo. Factor analysis yielded six meaningful factors. We conclude that the BSPS provides a reliable, valid, and sensitive measure for the evaluation of social phobia.
引用
收藏
页码:161 / 166
页数:6
相关论文
共 16 条
[1]  
DAVIDSON JRT, 1993, J CLIN PSYCHIAT, V54, P19
[2]  
DAVIDSON JRT, 1991, J CLIN PSYCHIAT, V52, P48
[3]  
DAVIDSON JRT, 1993, J CLIN PSYCHOPHARM, V13, P423
[4]  
DAVIDSON JRT, 1994, J CLIN PSYCHIAT, V55, P28
[5]  
DEVEAUGHGEISS J, 1994, 33 ANN M AM COLL NEU
[6]   PATTERNS OF ANXIETY - AN ANALYSIS OF SOCIAL ANXIETIES [J].
DIXON, JJ ;
DEMONCHAUX, C ;
SANDLER, J .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF MEDICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1957, 30 (02) :107-112
[7]  
GUY W, 1976, PUBLICATION ADM, P207
[8]  
Hamilton M., 1969, BRIT J PSYCHIAT, V3, P76
[9]  
KESSLER RC, 1994, ARCH GEN PSYCHIAT, V51, P8
[10]   SOCIAL PHOBIA - BIOLOGY AND PHARMACOLOGY [J].
LEVIN, AP ;
SCHNEIER, FR ;
LIEBOWITZ, MR .
CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW, 1989, 9 (01) :129-140