AUTHOR=Zhou Jianan , van Zalk Nejra TITLE=A person-oriented approach to social anxiety and depression: latent profiles and emotional functioning in adults JOURNAL=Frontiers in Psychology VOLUME=Volume 16 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1600531 DOI=10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1600531 ISSN=1664-1078 ABSTRACT=ObjectivesSymptoms of social anxiety and depression often co-occur, but many questions remain about symptom-level co-occurrence and the heterogeneity of symptom presentations across individuals, as well as their emotional functioning. This study aimed to investigate the co-occurrence of social anxiety and depressive symptoms in adults and variations in emotional functioning linking symptom heterogeneity.MethodsThis study used a person-oriented approach, Latent Profile Analysis (LPA), to identify distinct profiles (i.e., subgroups) in a UK adult sample (N = 222) varying in presentations of social anxiety and depressive symptoms. Further analyses examined between-profile differences in emotional functioning, including daily affect and emotion regulation.ResultsFour profiles were identified: Comorbid (12.61%), Dysphoric (10.36%), Socially Anxious (36.94%), and Low Distress (40.09%), replicating the four-profile solution revealed in prior research on adolescents. The Comorbid subgroup reported the most pronounced emotional dysfunction, with higher daily negative affect, lower positive affect, and greater emotion dysregulation than the other three subgroups. The Low Distress subgroup reported the best emotional functioning.ConclusionsThe cross-sectional study design restricts our ability to evaluate the long-term stability of the identified profiles. Nevertheless, this study illuminates the diverse ways social anxiety and depression intertwine, underscoring the necessity of transdiagnostic interventions that cater to a wide range of symptom patterns and emotional functioning.