Socially anxious individuals show weaker adaptation to angry faces, study finds

A recent study published in the journal Cognition and Emotion has uncovered new insights into how individuals with high social anxiety process emotional information. The research reveals that people who experience high levels of social anxiety adapt less to angry faces compared to happy faces, a mechanism that may contribute to maintaining negative biases in their perception of social cues. In contrast, individuals with low social anxiety show no significant difference in how they adapt to angry and happy faces.

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