Assessment Social Phobia 1
Assessment Social Phobia 1
Author Manuscript
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.
Published in final edited form as:
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Abstract
Since the emergence of social phobia in DSM nomenclature, the mental health community has
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
witnessed an expansion in standardized methods for the screening, diagnosis, and measurement of
the disorder. This article reviews formal assessment methods for social phobia, including
diagnostic interview, clinician-administered instruments, and self report questionnaires.
Frequently used tools for assessing constructs related to social phobia, such as disability and
quality of life, are also briefly presented. This review evaluates each method by highlighting the
assessment features recommended in social phobia literature, including method of administration,
item content, coverage, length of scale, type of scores generated, and time frame.
Introduction
Social phobia is an anxiety disorder characterized by excessive and persistent fear provoked
by exposure to social or performance situations (1). It is the potential criticism, humiliation,
or negative evaluation by others that is considered the source of anxiety among individuals
with social phobia. Excessive self-consciousness and self-criticism are features which often
lead to extreme phobic avoidance, the greatest cause of impairment among those with social
phobia (2). Significant distress or interference in functioning is, therefore, key to the
diagnosis of social phobia (3,1).
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Social phobia is considered a prevalent, chronic, and debilitating psychiatric disorder (4).
The U.S. National Comorbidity Survey Replication (NCS-R) found a lifetime and 1-year
prevalence rate of 12.1% and 7.1%, respectively (5). Non-U.S. international studies
demonstrate similarly high lifetime prevalence rates ranging from 7.1% to 16.1% (6,7).
Reports from the Israel National Health Survey (8), which did not examine social phobia,
suggest its inclusion would render anxiety disorders as more prevalent than mood disorders.
Rates of social phobia in primary care medical settings are slightly lower (7%) than in the
community (9), though these estimates may be a product of the patients’ social avoidance
and fewer care visits. Community rates are slightly higher among women than men with a
3:2 ratio (10), although these gender differences have not been found in clinical samples.
Prospective reports on the course of social phobia evidence an early onset (by age 19 in the
Correspondence and reprint requests to: Andrea M. Letamendi, MS, Anxiety and Traumatic Stress Disorders Research Program,
University of California San Diego, 8939 Villa La Jolla Drive, Suite 200, La Jolla, CA 92037-0855, Phone: 858-534-6438; fax:
858-534-6460, [email protected].
Letamendi et al. Page 2
majority of cases) with a flattening incidence rate after age 21 (11). Social phobia has a high
risk for persistence with rare natural remission; a chronic course is evidenced by individuals
in their 30’s and 40’s who endured either a progressive worsening or persistence of
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
symptoms since onset (12). Social phobia is correlated with impairments spanning
relationship, family, employment, and educational domains (13). A review on the costs of
social phobia found associations between the disorder and lower educational attainment,
work impairment and lower wages (4). In regards to social impairment, individuals with
social phobia have few friendships, weak social support, and increased likelihood to be
unmarried or live alone (4).
fears related to “most social situations” (15). Individuals with generalized social phobia
experience excessive fear and preoccupation with most social interactions and settings, e.g.
initiating conversations, speaking to strangers, and attending parties. The specifier
“generalized” is used in the DSM-IV-TR to capture the psychopathology of individuals who
fear both public performance situations and social interaction situations (1).
Of the two subtypes identified, the generalized subtype is more persistent, more impairing,
and more likely associated with secondary psychiatric illnesses (17). Worth noting is the
recent literature establishing evidence for more than two subtypes (18,5) or a non-discrete
continuum of severity (19) among social phobia samples. Therefore, it is unlikely that either
the number or the content of feared situations single-handedly characterize the heterogeneity
of social phobia, an important issue considered throughout this assessment review.
Social phobia commonly co-occurs with other DSM disorders. The NCS-R found that nearly
two-thirds (62.9%) of respondents with social phobia met for at least one other DSM-IV
disorder, with higher comorbidity rates associated with higher numbers of social fears (5).
The most common secondary Axis I diagnoses include agoraphobia, substance use
disorders, major depression, and body dysmorphic disorder (20,5,21). Substantial
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Formal Assessment
Methodized assessment plays a central role in describing a patient’s impairment, informing
an intervention method and guiding the ongoing treatment process. Distinct assessment
methods provide unique information—an assessor well-informed about measurement tools
will better approximate his or her aims. The recommended assessment of social phobia
includes diagnostic interviews, self report questionnaires, clinician-administered
instruments, and behavioral assessment (25,26). Guided by these recommendations, the
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.
Letamendi et al. Page 3
following sections focus on commonly used formal techniques for symptomatic assessment
of generalized and nongeneralized social phobia in clinical and research settings. Frequently
used tools for assessing related constructs (e.g., quality of life) are also briefly presented.
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Behavioral assessment techniques and physiological measures of social phobia are not
described here due to space limitations, but are well reviewed in Hart et al. (26) and McNeil,
Ries, and Turk (27), respectively. Likewise, child and adolescent versions of assessments
mentioned in this review can be found in Hitchcock, Chavira, and Stein (28).
Important features of rating scales for social phobia have been proposed (29), and thus guide
our evaluation of each instrument’s utility; they include method of administration, item
content, coverage, length of scale, type of scores generated, and time frame.
Diagnostic Interview
Semi-structured clinical interviews are advantageous in that they utilize patient report,
behavioral observation, and clinician’s judgment to achieve a comprehensive diagnostic
impression. Semi-structured interviews assist with differential diagnosis and evaluation of
comorbid conditions, elements important to the assessment of social phobia because fears of
social evaluation often co-occur with features such as agoraphobic avoidance, panic attacks,
social withdrawal, rumination, and dysthymia.
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Strengths of the ADIS-IV include its empirical support, broad coverage of anxiety disorders,
clinician severity ratings, and its modular format. Limitations of the ADIS-IV include the
cost and length of interview, required training to administer the interview, as well as the
omission of some psychiatric disorders. Familiarity of DSM Axis I psychiatric nomenclature
is a necessary criterion for proficient administration of the ADIS-IV.
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.
Letamendi et al. Page 4
Clinician-administered Scales
Clinician-rated psychometric instruments offer the brevity of an itemized scale as well as the
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
flexibility of clinical judgment and qualitative behavioral observation. The two most
commonly used clinician-rated instruments are described here.
Factor analytic evaluation of the LSAS has revealed a four-factor solution in one study: (1)
social interaction, (2) public speaking, (3) observation by others, and (4) eating and drinking
in public (38); and a five-factor solution in another: (1) interpersonal anxiety, (2) formal
speaking anxiety, (3) stranger-authority anxiety, (4) eating and drinking while being
observed, and (5) anxiety of doing something while being observed (39).
The LSAS was not intended as a diagnostic tool; however, it is often used for screening
social phobia in research settings. An LSAS score of 30 or above for nongeneralized social
phobia and 60 and above for generalized social phobia optimizes the balance between
sensitivity and specificity of the instrument (40). Treatment sensitivity has been
demonstrated in pharmacotherapy outcome research (41) as well as cognitive-behavioral
treatment of social phobia (42).
The LSAS has been translated into several languages and validated in international samples
(43–46). A Hebrew version of the LSAS demonstrated strong test-retest reliability, internal
consistency, and discriminant validity (47). The self-report version of the LSAS (LSAS-SR)
has demonstrated indistinguishable psychometric properties from the clinician version and
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
In sum, the major strength of the LSAS is its broad coverage of both performance and
interaction-related anxiety. The total score on the LSAS is often used as an index of current
impairment due to social phobia. The LSAS-SR can be utilized efficiently in pharmaceutical
trials, which often rely on repeated assessment. A limitation of the measure is that it does
not capture cognitive schemas or physiological complaints characterized among persons
with social phobia. Furthermore, the two situational subscales—performance and interaction
—have not been supported empirically.
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.
Letamendi et al. Page 5
scale of fear (0= “none” to 4= “extreme”) and a frequency scale of avoidance (0= “never” to
4= “always”). Four additional items comprise physiological symptoms associated with
experiencing or anticipating feared situations (e.g., blushing) that the examinee must also
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
rate using the same severity scale above. Thus, three subscores are obtained (Fear,
Avoidance, and Physiology) as well as a total score. Any inconsistencies or ambiguities in
patient report are to be queried and reconciled by the assessor (49). Scores range from 0 to
72, with 20 or above the cutoff for generalized social phobia.
Inter-rater and test-retest reliability (49,50) as well as treatment sensitivity (51) of the BSPS
total scale have been well supported.
Strengths of the BSPS are its brevity and its inclusion of the observable physiological
markers often reported among persons with social phobia. Limitations include lack of
empirical support for its three subscales/factors (50) and poor reliability of the physiological
subscale (49).
Self-report Scales
Self-rating methods are the most time-efficient among assessment options. They are ideal
for repeated evaluation and minimize error variance due to multiple assessors. These
features are especially advantageous for treatment studies that use multiple sites and
frequent symptom monitoring (29). Over the last three decades, the quantity of self-report
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
scales for social phobia has expanded considerably. Table 1 summarizes verbal self-report
questionnaires for social phobia, highlighting their key features.
cutoff for social phobia (52). The agoraphobia scale ranges from 0 to 78. The SPAI
difference score is calculated by subtracting the agoraphobia score from the social phobia
subscale score. Thus, the SPAI offers the option of factoring out avoidance due to
agoraphobia rather than social phobia.
Internal consistency and test-retest reliability for the SPAI are well supported (52,53).
Scores on the SPAI significantly differentiate patients with social phobia and those from
other clinic groups such as panic disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder (52,60). The
SPAI difference score is considered less reliable than the SPAI social phobia subscale score
(61) and thus the latter is considered more parsimonious when evaluating groups of
individuals with social phobia. However, the SPAI difference score has demonstrated
superior discriminative power relative to the SPAI social phobia subscale (62). Furthermore,
both the SPAI difference score and the SPAI social phobia subscale score demonstrated
treatment sensitivity following cognitive-behavioral therapy with equivalent effect sizes
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.
Letamendi et al. Page 6
(61). The SPAI social phobia subscale and the SPAI agoraphobia subscale have been
confirmed by factor-analysis using a nonclinical sample (63). Finally, an abbreviated SPAI
(SPAI-23) has recently been developed with statistical validation (64).
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Strengths of the SPAI include its thorough coverage of social situations, subcomponents to
assess the variety of observer contexts, superior discriminant validity over other self reports
(60), the optional exclusion of circumscribed agoraphobia symptoms, and inclusion of
physiological markers of social phobia. Limitations of the SPAI are its length of
administration and cumbersome scoring system relative to other self-report scales.
Furthermore, the use of the “opposite sex” term in many items overlooks potential subjects
with same-sex attraction, ostensibly attenuating their social phobia scores on the SPAI.
The Social Phobia Scale and the Social Interaction Anxiety Scale (SPS and SIAS)
The SPS and SIAS were developed as separate self-report measures of social anxiety by
Mattick and Clarke (54,55). Often administered together, the SPS pertains to fears of
scrutiny during observation by others, whereas the SIAS assesses anxiety experienced
during interaction with others. The SPS contains 20 statements that self-reporters must rate
the degree of how “characteristic or true” for them (0= “not at all” to 4= “extremely”). Items
include both worries pertaining to signs of nervousness (e.g., “I fear I may blush when I am
with others.”) as well as to scrutiny of performance (e.g., “I become anxious if I have to
write in front of others.”). The SIAS also contains 20 statements with the same rating system
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
as the SPS. SIAS items pertain to discomfort in social settings (e.g., “I am tense mixing in a
group.”) including dyadic interactions (e.g. “I tense up if I meet an acquaintance on the
street.”). A total score from 0 to 80 is derived separately for each scale. Suggested cutoff
scores of 34 for the SIAS and 24 for the SPS denote generalized social phobia and
nongeneralized social phobia, respectively (65).
Internal consistency and test-retest reliability for the SPS and SIAS are well supported (55).
Both scales have demonstrated formal treatment sensitivity following cognitive behavioral
therapy with effect sizes for SIAS more robust (61) as well as following pharmacotherapy
(42). The SIAS and SPS reliably discriminate patients with social phobia from those with
other anxiety disorders (66). They appear to measure different but related constructs;
validity studies support the distinction between social interactional anxiety and scrutiny
fears (54,66). However, data reduction analysis of items from both scales revealed three
factors: (1) interaction anxiety, (2) anxiety about being observed by others, (3) fear that
others will notice anxiety symptoms (67). This finding suggests multifactoral phenomena in
nongeneralized anxiety and is consistent with research disconfirming the 2-subtype
heterogeneity of social phobia (18,5).
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Strengths of the SPS and SIAS include their combined coverage of social and performance
situations; usage of both scales is recommended for patients with generalized social phobia.
If only performance-related anxiety is of interest, the SPS is a facile, reliable self-report tool.
Coverage of social phobia phenomenology by the SPS and SIAS is limited to thoughts and
feelings (i.e. “worry about”; “tense”; “self conscious”). Thus, both scales lack any avoidance
ratings which we know to be pertinent to the patient’s impairment. Furthermore, the SPS
does not query all public speaking situations. Factor analytic findings suggest a conceptual
problem with treating the SPS as measuring a unidimensional construct.
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.
Letamendi et al. Page 7
scale (0= “not at all” to 4= “extremely”). The SPIN range of scores is 0 to 68; a cutoff score
of 19 distinguishes between social phobia and controls (56).
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and construct validity of the SPIN has been
established by the developers of the measure (56) and confirmed with excellent estimates by
others (68). The SPIN has also evidenced treatment sensitivity following cognitive
behavioral therapy (68).
Advantages of the SPIN include its brevity, simplicity, social phobia sensitivity, and ease of
scoring (56); these facets make the measure popular among treatment outcome trials. A
limitation of the SPIN is the relatively modest empirical support for its physiological arousal
subscale (68).
The Mini-SPIN (57), a brief self-report scale created from 3 items of the SPIN, has recently
gained attention as an impressive screening tool with excellent sensitivity (89%) and
specificity (90%) in identifying generalized social phobia in managed care (57). Its three
items (“Fear of embarrassment causes me to avoid doing things and speaking to people.”; “I
avoid activities in which I am the center of attention.”; “Being embarrassed or looking
stupid are among my worst fears.”) evidenced strong internal consistency and support of
construct validity (69). The suggested cutoff score of 6 on the Mini-SPIN has been
empirically supported (57,69). Thus, the Mini-SPIN seems a promising assessment tool for
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
The SAD is a reliable measure of general worry and avoidance of social interactions.
Limitations of the SAD include the absence of specific physiological responses to social
interactions and the lack of support for its use as a diagnostic aid for social phobia.
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Strengths of the FQ-Social include its brevity and simplicity; its five items effectively
differentiate between social phobia and other anxiety disorders (74,75). However, the FQ-
Social is limited to avoidance ratings and does not fully cover the breadth of social phobia
domains. Furthermore, mixed findings question the utility of the FQ-Social in differentiating
between generalized and nongeneralized social phobia (76,77).
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.
Letamendi et al. Page 8
judge themselves harshly and assume others judge them negatively; these are often the core
schema challenged in cognitive therapy (25). Social anxiety is hypothesized to be activated
and maintained by dysfunctional beliefs and biased information-processing; cognitive
change may be central to optimal outcomes among individuals with social phobia (79).
Table 2 provides an overview of cognitive measures of social phobia. They include the Fear
of Negative Evaluation Scale (FNE; 58), The Social Interaction Self-Statement Test (SISST;
80), The Social Thoughts and Beliefs Scale (STABS; 81), and the Appraisal of Social
Concerns (ASC; 82).
excessive behavioral avoidance (i.e., social isolation) and cognitive rumination (83). Table 3
summarizes the recommended, psychometrically sound assessments for measuring
associated features of social phobia.
Conclusion
This review highlighted the broad array of instruments available for the assessment of social
phobia, as well as the key features and limitations associated with each. Consideration of
each assessment approach should be made with the acknowledgement that clinical
evaluation is in itself a phobic stimulus for many patients with social phobia (25).
Additionally, a skillful assessor maintains multicultural sensitivity when assessing
individuals with minority backgrounds, including sexual orientation, such that they are
aware of the potential bias(es) of a measurement tool. Therefore, the expertise, skill, and
professionalism of the clinician will influence the quality of social phobia assessment
beyond the abilities of the measure in question.
References
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.
Letamendi et al. Page 9
6. Stein MB, Walker JR, Ford DR. Setting diagnostic thresholds for social phobia: Considerations
from a community survey of social anxiety. Am J Psychiatry 1994;151:408–412. [PubMed:
8109650]
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
7. Wacker HR, Mullejans R, Klein KH, Battegay R. Identification of cases of anxiety disorders and
affective disorders in the community according to ICD-10 and DSM-III-R using the Composite
International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI). Int J Methods Psychiatr Res 1992;2:91–100.
8. Levinson D, Zilber N, Lerner Y, Grinshpoon A, Levav I. Prevalence of mood and anxiety disorders
in the community: Results from the Israel National Health Survey. Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci
2007;44:94–103. [PubMed: 18080646]
9. Stein MB, McQuaid JR, Laffaye C, McCahill ME. Social phobia in the primary care medical
setting. J Fam Pract 1999;48:514–519. [PubMed: 10428248]
10. Kessler RC, McGonagle K, Zhao S, et al. Lifetime and 12-month prevalence of DSM-III-R
psychiatric disorders in the United States: Results form the National Comorbidity Survey. Arch
Gen Psychiat 1994;51:8–19. [PubMed: 8279933]
11. Wittchen HU, Nelson GB, Lachner G. Prevalence of mental disorders and psychosocial
impairments in adolescents and young adults. Psychol Med 1998;28:109–126. [PubMed: 9483687]
12. Wittchen HU. Epidemiology, patterns of comorbidity, and associated disabilities of social phobia.
Psychiatr Clin North Am 2001;24:617–41. [PubMed: 11723624]
13. Schneier FR, Heckelman LR, Garfinkel R, et al. Functional impairment in social phobia. J Clin
Psychiatry 1994;55:322–331. [PubMed: 8071299]
14. American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. 3.
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
[PubMed: 16278832]
22. Reich J. The relationship of social phobia to avoidant personality disorder: a proposal to reclassify
avoidant personality disorder based on clinical empirical findings. Eur Psychiatry 2000;15:151–
159. [PubMed: 10960264]
23. Reichborn-Kjennerud T, Czajkowski N, Torgersen S, Neale MC, Orstavik RE, Tambs K, et al. The
relationship between avoidant personality disorder and social phobia: a population-based twin
study. Am J Psychiatry 2007;164:1722–1728. [PubMed: 17974938]
24. Chambless DL, Fydrich T, Rodebaugh TL. Generalized social phobia and avoidant personality
disorder: meaningful distinction or useless duplication? Depress Anxiety 2008;25:8–19. [PubMed:
17161000]
25. Antony MM. Assessment and treatment of social phobia. Can J Psychiatry 1997;42:826–834.
[PubMed: 9356770]
26. Hart, TA.; Jack, MS.; Turk, CL.; Heimberg, RG. Issues for the measurement of social anxiety
disorder (social phobia). In: Westenberg, HGM.; Den Boer, JA., editors. Focus on psychiatry:
Social anxiety disorder. Amsterdam: Syn-Thesis; 1999. p. 133-155.
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.
Letamendi et al. Page 10
27. McNeil, DW.; Ries, BJ.; Turk, CL. Behavioral Assessment: Self-report, physiology, and overt
behavior. In: Heimberg, RG.; Liebowitz, MR.; Hope, DA.; Schneier, FR., editors. Social Phobia:
Diagnosis, Assessment, and Treatment. New York: Guilford Press; 1995. p. 202-231.
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
28. Hitchcock CA, Chavira DA, Stein MB. Recent findings of childhood social phobia. Isr J Psychiatry
Relat Sci. Manuscript in preparation.
29. Lipsitz, JD.; Liebowitz, MR. Assessing social anxiety disorder with rating scales: Practical utility
for the clinician. In: Bandelow, B.; Stein, DJ., editors. Social Anxiety Disorder. New York: Marcel
Dekker, Inc; 2004. p. 93-115.
30. Brown, TA.; DiNardo, PA.; Barlow, DH. Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule for DSM-IV
(ADIS-IV). San Antonio, Texas: Psychological Corporation/Graywind Publications; 1994.
31. Hope DA, Laguna LB, Heimberg RG, Barlow DH. The relationship between ADIS clinician’s
Severity Rating and self-report measures among social phobics. Depress Anxiety 1997;4:120–125.
[PubMed: 9166640]
32. DiNardo, PA.; Brown, TA.; Lawton, JK.; Barlow, DH. The anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule
for DSM-IV Lifetime Version: Description and initial evidence for diagnostic reliability. Paper
presented at the annual meeting of the 29th annual meeting for the Association for the
Advancement of Behavior Therapy; Washington, DC. 1995.
33. First, MB.; Spitzer, RL.; Gibbon, M.; Williams, JBW. Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV-
TR Axis I Disorders, Research Version, Patient Edition. (SCID-I/P). New York: Biometrics
Research, New York State Psychiatric Institute; Nov. 2002 Revision
34. Zanarini MC, Skodol AE, Bender D, et al. The Collaborative Longitudinal Personality Disorders
Study: reliability of axis I and II diagnoses. J Personal Disord 2000;14:291–299.
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
35. Ventura J, Liberman RP, Green MF, Shaner A, Mintz J. Training and quality assurance with the
Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID-I/P). Psychiat Res 1998;79:163–173.
36. Liebowtiz MR. Social Phobia. Mod Probl Pharmacopsychiatry 1987;22:141–73. [PubMed:
2885745]
37. Heimberg RG, Horner KJ, Juster HR, et al. Psychometric properties of the Liebowitz Social
Anxiety Scale. Psychol Med 1999;29:199–212. [PubMed: 10077308]
38. Safren SA, Heimberg RG, Horner KJ, Juster HR, Schneier FR, Liebowitz MR. Factor Structure of
Social Fears: The Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale. J Anxiety Disord 1999;13:253–270. [PubMed:
10372341]
39. Perugi G, Nassini S, Maremmani I, et al. Putative clinical subtypes of social phobia: A factor-
analytic study. ActaPsychiat Scand 2001;104:280–288.
40. Mennin DS, Fresco DM, Heimberg RG, Schneier FR, Davies SO, Liebowitz MR. Screening for
social anxiety disorder in the clinical setting: Using the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale. J Anxiety
Disord 2000;16:661–673. [PubMed: 12405524]
41. Stein MB, Liebowitz MR, Lydiard RB, Pitts CD, Bushnell W, Gergel I. Paroxetine treatment of
generalized social phobia (social anxiety disorder). JAMA 1998;280:708–713. [PubMed:
9728642]
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
42. Heimberg RG, Liebowitz MR, Hope DA, et al. Cognitive behavioral group therapy vs. phenelzine
therapy for social phobia. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1998;55:1133–1141. [PubMed: 9862558]
43. Yao SN, Note I, Fanget F, et al. Social anxiety in patients with social phobia: Validation of the
Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale: The French version. Encephale 1999;25:429–435. [PubMed:
10598306]
44. Bobes J, Badia X, Luque A, Garcia M, Gonzalez MP, Dal-Re R. Validation of the Spanish version
of the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale, Social Anxiety and Distress Scale, and Sheehan Disability
Inventory for the evaluation of social phobia. Med Clin-Barcelona 1999;112:530–538.
45. Asakura S, Inoue S, Sasaki F, et al. Reliability and validity of the Japanese version of the
Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale. Seishin Igaku 2002;44:1077–1084.
46. Soykan C, Ozguven HD, Gencoz T. Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale: The Turkish version. Psychol
Rep 2003;93:1059–1069. [PubMed: 14765570]
47. Levin JB, Marom S, Gur S, Wechter D, Hermesh H. Psychometric properties and the three
proposed subscales of a self-report version of the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale translated into
Hebrew. Depress Anxiety 2002;16:143–151. [PubMed: 12497645]
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.
Letamendi et al. Page 11
48. Fresco DM, Coles ME, Heimberg RG, Liebowitz MR, Hami S, Stein MB, et al. The Liebowitz
Social Anxiety Scale: a comparison of the psychometric properties of self-report and clinician-
administered formats. Psychol Med 2001;6:1025–35. [PubMed: 11513370]
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
49. Davidson JRT, Potts NLS, Richichi EA, Krishnan R, Ford SM, Smith RD, et al. The Brief Social
Phobia Scale. J Clin Psychiatry 1991;52(11 Suppl):48S–51S.
50. Davidson JRT, Miner CM, De Veaugh-Geiss J, Tupler LA, Colket JT, Potts NLS. The Brief Social
Phobia Scale: a psychometric evaluation. Psychol Med 1997;27:161–166. [PubMed: 9122296]
51. Stein MB, Fyer AJ, Davidson JRT, Pollack MH, Wiita B. Fluvoxamine treatment of social phobia
(social anxiety disorder): a double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Am J Psychiatry
1999;156:756–760. [PubMed: 10327910]
52. Turner SM, Beidel DC, Dancu C, Stanley MA. An empirically derived inventory to measure social
fears and anxiety: the Social phobia and Anxiety Inventory. Psychol Assess 1989;1:35–40.
53. Turner, SM.; Beidel, DC.; Dancu, C. Social Phobia and Anxiety Inventory Manual. North
Tonawanda, NY: Multihealth Systems; 1996.
54. Mattick RP, Clarke JC. Development and validation of measures of social phobia scrutiny fear and
social interaction anxiety. Unpublished manuscript. January;1989
55. Mattick RP, Clarke JC. Development and validation of measures of social phobia scrutiny fear and
social interaction anxiety. Behav Res Ther 1998;36:455–470. [PubMed: 9670605]
56. Connor KM, Davidson JRT, Churchill LE, Sherwood A, Foa E, Weisler RH. Psychometric
properties of the Social Phobia Inventory. Br J Psychiatry 2000;176:379–386. [PubMed:
10827888]
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
57. Connor KM, Kobak KA, Churchill LE, Katzelnick D, Davidson JRT. Mini-SPIN: A brief
screening assessment for generalized social anxiety disorder. Depress Anxiety 2001;14:137–140.
[PubMed: 11668666]
58. Watson D, Friend R. Measurement of social evaluative anxiety. J Consult Clin Psychol
1969;33:448–457. [PubMed: 5810590]
59. Marks IM, Mathews AM. Brief standard self-rating for phobic patients. Behav Res Ther
1979;17:263–267. [PubMed: 526242]
60. Peters L. Discriminant validity of the Social Phobia and Anxiety Inventory (SPAI), the Social
Phobia Scale (SPS) and the Social Interaction Anxiety Scale (SIAS). Behav Res Ther
2000;38:943–950. [PubMed: 10957828]
61. Ries BJ, McNeil DW, Boone ML, Turk CL, Carter LE, Heimberg RG. Assessment of
contemporary social phobia verbal report instruments. Behav Res Ther 1998;36:983–994.
[PubMed: 9714948]
62. Beidel DC, Turner SM. Scoring the Social Phobia and Anxiety Inventory: comments on Herbert et
al. J Psychopathol Behav 1992;14:377–379.
63. Osman A, Barrios FX, Aukes D, Osman JR. Psychometric evaluation of the Social Phobia and
Anxiety Inventory in college students. J Clin Psychol 1995;51:235–243. [PubMed: 7797647]
64. Roberson-Nay R, Strong DR, Nay WT, Beidel DC, Turner SM. Development of an abbreviated
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Social Phobia and Anxiety Inventory (SPAI) using item response theory: the SPAI-23. Psychol
Assess 2007;19:133–145. [PubMed: 17371128]
65. Heimberg RG, Mueller GP, Holt CS, Hope DA, Liebowitz MR. Assessment of anxiety in social
interaction and being observed by others: the Social Interaction Anxiety Scale and the Social
Phobia Scale. Behav Ther 1992;23:53–73.
66. Brown EJ, Turovsky J, Heimberg RG, Juster HR, Brown TA, Barlow DH. Validation of the Social
Interaction Anxiety Scale and the Social Phobia Scale Across the Anxiety Disorders. Psychol
Assess 1997;9:21–27.
67. Safren SA, Turk CL, Heimberg RG. Factor sctructure of the Social Interaction Anxiety Scale and
the Social Phobia Scale. Behav Res Ther 1998;36:443–453. [PubMed: 9670604]
68. Antony MM, Coons MJ, McCabe RE, Ashbaugh A, Swinson RP. Psychometric properties of the
social phobia inventory: further evaluation. Behav Res Ther 2006;44:1177–1185. [PubMed:
16257387]
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.
Letamendi et al. Page 12
69. Weeks JW, Spokas ME, Heimberg RG. Psychometric evaluation of the mini-social phobia
inventory (Mini-SPIN) in a treatment-seeking sample. Depress Anxiety 2007;24:382–391.
[PubMed: 17099878]
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
70. Turner SM, McCanna M, Beidel DC. Validity of the Social Avoidance and Distress and Fear of
Negative Evaluation Scales. Behav Res Ther 1987;25:113–115. [PubMed: 3593163]
71. Turner SM, Beidel DC. Some further comments on the measurement of social phobia. Behav Res
Ther 1988;26:411–413. [PubMed: 3190650]
72. Oei TPS, Kenna D, Evans L. The reliability, validity, and utility of the SAD and FNE scales for
anxiety disorder patients. Pers Indiv Differ 1991;12:111–116.
73. Herbert JD, Bellack AS, Hope DA. Concurrent validity of the Social Phobia and Anxiety
Inventory. J Psychopathol Behav 1991;13:357–368.
74. Cox BJ, Swinson RP, Shaw BF. Value of the Fear Questionnaire in differentiating agoraphobia and
social phobia. Brit J Psychiat 1991;159:842–845.
75. Oei TPS, Moylan A, Evans L. Validity and clinical utility of the Fear Questionnaire for anxiety-
disorder patients. Psychol Assess 1991:391–7.
76. Heimberg RG, Hope DA, Dodge CS, Becker RE. DSM-III-R subtypes of social phobia:
comparison of generalized social phobics and public speaking phobics. J Nerv Ment Dis
1990;178:172–179. [PubMed: 2307969]
77. Gelernter CS, Stein MB, Tancer ME, Uhde TW. An examination of syndromal validity and
diagnostic subtypes in social phobia and panic disorder. J Clin Psychiatry 1992;53:23–27.
[PubMed: 1737736]
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
78. Elting, DT.; Hope, DA. Cognitive assessment. In: Heimberg, RG.; Liebowitz, MR.; Hope, DA.;
Schneier, FR., editors. Social Phobia: Diagnosis, Assessment, and Treatment. New York:
Guilford; 1995. p. 232-258.
79. Turk, CL.; Coles, MA.; Heimberg, RG. Psychotherapy for social phobia. In: Stein, DJ.; Hollander,
E., editors. Textbook of anxiety disorders. Washington DC: American Psychiatric Press; 2002. p.
323-339.
80. Glass CR, Merluzzi TV, Biever JL, Larsen KH. Cognitive assessment of social anxiety:
Development and validation of a self-statement questionnaire. Cognitive Ther Res 1982;6:37–55.
81. Turner SM, Johnson MR, Beidel DC, Heiser NA, Lydiard RB. The Social Thoughts and Beliefs
Scale: A new inventory for assessing cognitions in social phobia. Psychol Assess 2003;15:384–
391. [PubMed: 14593839]
82. Telch MJ, Lucas RA, Smits JAJ, Powers MB, Heimberg R, Hart T. Appraisal of Social Concerns:
A cognitive assessment instrument for social phobia. Depress Anxiety 2004;19:217–224.
[PubMed: 15274170]
83. Safren SA, Heimberg RG, Brown EJ, Holle C. Quality of life in social phobia. Depress Anxiety
1997;4:126–133. [PubMed: 9166641]
84. Sheehan, D. The anxiety disease. New York: Scribner; 1983.
85. Wittchen HU, Fuetsch M, Sonntag H, Muller N, Liebowitz M. Disability and quality of life in pure
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
and comorbid social phobia: Findings from a controlled study. Eur Psychiatry 2000;15:46–58.
[PubMed: 10713802]
86. Beck, AT.; Steer, RA.; Brown, GK. Beck Depression Inventory manual. 2. San Antonio: The
Psychological Corporation; 1996.
87. Ware JE, Sherbourne CD. The MOS 36-item short form health survey (SF-36): I. Conceptual
framework and item selection. Med Care 1992;30:473–483. [PubMed: 1593914]
88. McHorney CA, Ware JE, Raczek AE. The MOS 36-item short form health survey (SF-36): II.
Psychometric and clinical tests of validity in measuring physical and mental health constructs.
Med Care 1993;31:247–263. [PubMed: 8450681]
89. Lewin-Epstein N, Sagiv-Schifter T, Shabtai EL, Shmueli A. Validation of the 36-Item Short Form
Health Survey (Hebrew Version) in the Adult population of Israel. Med Care 1998;36:1361–1370.
[PubMed: 9749659]
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.
Letamendi et al. Page 13
Table 1
Self-rating scales for symptomatic assessment of social phobia
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Social Phobia and Anxiety 45 items cover somatic, cognitive, Agoraphobia subscale Cumbersome scoring
Inventory (52,53) and behavioral symptoms
Social Phobia Scale (54,55) 20 items assess fears of scrutiny by Full coverage of SP symptoms when No avoidance ratings
others used in conjunction with SIAS
Social Interaction Anxiety 20 items assess fears of interaction Full coverage of SP symptoms when No avoidance ratings
Scale (54,55) used in conjunction with SPS
Social Phobia Inventory (56) 17 items assess fear, avoidance, SP sensitivity and user-friendly Lacks strong support for
physiology of SP physiological subscale
Mini-SPIN(57) 3-items related to social Brief; excellent SP sensitivity/ Subsequent assessment usually
embarrassment specificity required
Social Avoidance and 28 items measure anxiety, Reliable among clinical SP samples Lack of empirical support as a
Distress Scale (58) avoidance, distress related to diagnostic aid
interactions
Fear Questionnaire Social 5 items rated on performance/ Brief, useful as diagnostic aid Limited to avoidance ratings
Phobia Subscale (59) social avoidance
SP = Social phobia
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.
Letamendi et al. Page 14
Table 2
Self-rating scales for cognitive assessment of social phobia
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Fear of Negative Evaluation Scale (58) 1969 30 Assesses non-specific but critical cognitive features of SP
The Social Interaction Self-Statement 1982 21 Thought-endorsement measure relevant to 1-to-1 interactions
Test (80)
The Social Thoughts and Beliefs Scale 2003 21 Empirically validated to measure cognitions in situational parameters
(81)
Appraisal of Social Concerns (82) 2004 20 Measures SP-related threat appraisals; similar but more efficient than
thought-listing
SP = Social phobia
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.
Letamendi et al. Page 15
Table 3
Assessments of associated features of social phobia
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Sheehan Disability Scale 4-items assess current levels of Single dimension of global Change-over- time in scores
(84) impairment across work/school, functioning from 0 (unimpaired) to frequently used in treatment
social, and family domains 30 (highly impaired) outcome studies
Liebowitz Self-Rated Assesses current and lifetime Mean score of 39 = substantial Includes suicidal behavior
Disability Scale (13) impairment due to “emotional disability (85) domain
problems” across 11 domains
Beck Depression Inventory, Self-report of cognitive, behavioral, 0 to 10=Minimal depression 10– Efficient format with wide
2nd Edition (86) and somatic symptoms of 18=Mild depression 19– coverage of depression
depression 29=Moderate to severe depression symptomatology
30–63=Severe depression
Medical Outcomes Study Measures general quality of life 50 to 70 = Moderately reduced Validated in Hebrew (89) and
Health Status over a broad range of non- disease- quality of life Below 50 = Markedly other languages
Questionnaire-36 item Short specific health concepts reduced quality of life
Form (87,88)
SP = Social phobia
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 August 23.