The Social Reticence Scale (SRS) is a valuable measure for understanding shyness as a unique and separate dimension of personality. This twenty-item measure of social shyness was originally developed as a basic tool for research on personality factors in interpersonal behavior and relationships, but it is also useful in applied settings.
The Manual presents an alternative scoring procedure for empirically derived components of SRS responses and scale level representative data for over 2,500 respondents.
Copyright © 1986 by Consulting Psychologists Press, Inc.
Features of the SRS
Purpose: Measure shyness as a unique and separate dimension of personality
Length: 20 items
Average completion time: 5-10 minutes
Target population: High school or older
Administration: For individual or group administration
Uses of the SRS
Scale
Social Reticence
No translations available; you can request permission to make one.