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Tine Vervoort

Researcher at Ghent University

Publications -  97
Citations -  3969

Tine Vervoort is an academic researcher from Ghent University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pain catastrophizing & Chronic pain. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 91 publications receiving 3516 citations. Previous affiliations of Tine Vervoort include University of Alabama at Birmingham & Dalhousie University.

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Facing others in pain: the effects of empathy.

TL;DR: This research attacked the mode of reinforcement learning in mice by developing a probabilistic approach to assess the importance of social reinforcement in the development of anxiety and depression in mice.
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A biopsychosocial formulation of pain communication

TL;DR: A detailed framework is presented for understanding the numerous and complicated interactions among psychological and social determinants of pain through examination of the process of pain communication, which considers knowledge from a variety of perspectives.
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Parental catastrophizing about their child's pain. The parent version of the Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS-P): a preliminary validation.

TL;DR: In the clinical sample, parents’ catastrophic thinking about their child’s pain had a significant contribution in explaining (a) childhood illness‐related parenting stress, parental depression and anxiety, and (b) the child”s disability and school attendance, beyond the child's pain intensity.
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Catastrophic Thinking About Pain is Independently Associated with Pain Severity, Disability, and Somatic Complaints in School Children and Children with Chronic Pain

TL;DR: Results suggest the importance of assessing for pain catastrophizing in children and suggest the effects of age, sex, and NA in terms of communicating distress to significant others.
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Parental catastrophizing about child's pain and its relationship with activity restriction: the mediating role of parental distress.

TL;DR: Findings revealed that parents with a high level of catastrophic thinking about their child's pain experienced more distress and a greater behavioral tendency of wanting to stop their child’s pain‐inducing activity.