Abstract

Describes the development of a scale to assess individual differences in self-consciousness. Construction of the scale involved testing the 38 initial items with 130 female and 82 male undergraduates. A principal components factor analysis of the data yielded 3 factors accounting for 43% of the variance: Private Self-Consciousness, Public Self-Consciousness, and Social Anxiety. The final version of the scale, which contained 23 items, was administered to several groups of undergraduates (N = 668) to obtain norms, test-retest (2 wks), subscale correlation, and reliability data. Test-retest reliabilities were .84 for the Public Self-Consciousness scale, .79 for the Private Self-Consciousness scale, .73 for the Social Anxiety scale, and .80 for the total score. Public Self-Consciousness correlated moderately with both Private Self-Consciousness and Social Anxiety, while the correlation of Private Self-Consciousness with Social Anxiety fluctuated around zero. No sex differences in scores were observed. Implications for research and therapy are discussed.

Keywords

PsychologyConsciousnessSocial psychologyPsychotherapist

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Publication Info

Year
1975
Type
article
Volume
43
Issue
4
Pages
522-527
Citations
3683
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Closed

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Allan Fenigstein, Michael F. Scheier, Arnold H. Buss (1975). Public and private self-consciousness: Assessment and theory.. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology , 43 (4) , 522-527. https://doi.org/10.1037/h0076760

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DOI
10.1037/h0076760