1990
DOI: 10.1016/0022-1031(90)90034-j
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Social anxiety, state dependence, and the next-in-line effect

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Cited by 14 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Alternatively, high-social-anxious individuals may have greater difficulty performing the brainstorming task under conditions of high apprehension. For example, Bond and Omar (1990) reported that the memory deficit of what happens while one is next in line for a public performance occurs primarily for individuals who are socially anxious. It is also possible that the poor performance of the socially anxious participants was related to their sensitivity to production blocking.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Alternatively, high-social-anxious individuals may have greater difficulty performing the brainstorming task under conditions of high apprehension. For example, Bond and Omar (1990) reported that the memory deficit of what happens while one is next in line for a public performance occurs primarily for individuals who are socially anxious. It is also possible that the poor performance of the socially anxious participants was related to their sensitivity to production blocking.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, people who are self-absorbed during interactions have difficulty devoting sufficient attention to what other people say and do, thereby interfering with memory. Research on the "nextin-line effect" shows that ruminating about what one is going to say when it is one's turn to speak to a group interferes with memory for what other people say (Bond & Omar, 1990;Brenner, 1973). Similarly, feeling conspicuous undermines people's memories for what happens during social en-counters (Kimble & Zehr, 1982), presumably because self-thoughts use cognitive resources needed to remember details about the encounter.…”
Section: Self-reflection and Self-ruminationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Prior research has highlighted two main components of performance anticipation: thoughts about one's upcoming performance (e.g., Bond & Kirkpatrick, 1982), and performance anxiety (e.g., Bond & Omar, 1990). Below, we outline each component and explain how they contribute to the negative relation between performance anticipation and memory.…”
Section: Why Does Performance Anticipation Reduce Memory?mentioning
confidence: 99%