Anxiety and Mentalizing: Uncertainty as a Driver of Egocentrism

Author:

Surtees Andrew D. R.12ORCID,Briscoe Henry13,Todd Andrew R.4

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom

2. Birmingham Women’s and Children’s NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham, United Kingdom

3. Changing Minds UK, Warrington, United Kingdom

4. Department of Psychology, University of California, Davis

Abstract

Emotions shape how people understand and interact with others. Here, we review evidence on the relationship between anxiety—a future-oriented emotion characterized by negative valence, high arousal, and uncertainty—and mentalizing—the ascription of mental content to other agents. We examine three aspects of this relationship: how people with anxiety disorders perform on mentalizing tasks relative to controls; how situational anxiety alters mentalizing performance; and how autistic people, who experience the impacts of mentalizing differences, are at high risk of anxiety. We propose a bidirectional model for understanding how short-term and longer term anxiety are related to mentalizing. Key to this relationship is the aversive experience of uncertainty and the motivations that result from it.

Funder

Economic and Social Research Council

Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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