Self-efficacy conception of anxiety
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Anxiety Research
- Vol. 1 (2), 77-98
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10615808808248222
Abstract
In social cognitive theory, perceived self-efficacy to exercise control over potential threats plays a central role in anxiety arousal. Threat is a relational property reflecting the match between perceived coping capabilities and potentially hurtful aspects of the environment. People who believe they can exercise control over potential threats do not engage in apprehensive thinking and are not perturbed by them. But those who believe they cannot manage threatening events that might occur experience high levels of anxiety arousal. Experimental analyses of the microrelation between perceived self-efficacy and anxiety arousal reveal that perceived coping inefficacy is accompanied by high levels of subjective distress, autonomic arousal and catecholamine secretion. Environmental events are not always completely under personal control and most human activities contain some potential risks. The exercise of control over anxiety arousal, therefore, requires not only development of behavioral coping efficacy but also efficacy in controlling dysfunctional apprehensive cognitions. It is not frightful cognitions per se but the perceived self-inefficacy to turn them off that is the major source of anxiety arousal. Analyses of the causal structure of self-protective behavior show that anxiety arousal and avoidant behavior are mainly co-effects of perceived coping inefficacy.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Self-efficacy and outcome expectations as predictors of controlled smoking statusCognitive Therapy and Research, 1985
- The nature of depressive and anxious, intrusive thoughts: Distinct or uniform phenomena?Behaviour Research and Therapy, 1985
- Efficacy expectations and outcome expectations as predictors of performance in a snake-handling taskCognitive Therapy and Research, 1984
- Accuracy of efficacy and outcome expectations in predicting performance in a simulated assertiveness taskCognitive Therapy and Research, 1984
- Self-efficacy beliefs and tennis performanceCognitive Therapy and Research, 1983
- Cognition and exposure in vivo in the treatment of agoraphobia: Short-term and delayed effectsCognitive Therapy and Research, 1982
- III. Determination of plasma catecholamines and free 3, 4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid in continuously collected human plasma by high performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detectionLife Sciences, 1981
- Changing a frightening toy into a pleasant toy by allowing the infant to control its actions.Developmental Psychology, 1978
- The transfer gap in systematic desensitization: An analogue studyBehaviour Research and Therapy, 1969
- Method and theory in the study of avoidance.Psychological Review, 1969