Winning or not losing? The impact of non-pain goal focus on attentional bias to learned pain signals.
Martien G.S. Schrooten,Stefaan Van Damme,Geert Crombez,Hanne P.J. Kindermans,Johan W.S. Vlaeyen +4 more
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TLDR
This experiment aimed to replicate the finding that attentional bias for pain signals in healthy participants can be reduced when a non-pain goal is pursued, and to extend this finding by taking into account the outcome focus of the non- pain goal.About:
This article is published in Scandinavian Journal of Pain.The article was published on 2018-10-25 and is currently open access. It has received 5 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Attentional bias & Cognitive bias.read more
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The Psychology of Fear and Stress
TL;DR: The Psychology of Fear and Stress by Jeffrey A. Gray as discussed by the authors is a well-known topic in contemporary psychology. In this book, the author has provided a readable, accurate, and contemporary treatment of his topic.
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Cognitive biases in pain: an integrated functional-contextual framework.
TL;DR: This work aims to demonstrate the efforts towards in-situ applicability of EMT in the context of clinical practice and to provide a basis for future research in this area.
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Pain Unstuck: The Role of Action and Motivation.
TL;DR: In taking a wide view of pain and action, this review places the relationship between pain, motivation and action at its core, unpicking a dynamic process that can become stuck.
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The time course of attentional biases in pain: a meta-analysis of eye-tracking studies.
Emma Blaisdale Jones,Louise Sharpe,Sally Andrews,Ben Colagiuri,Joanne Dudeney,Elaine Fox,Lauren C. Heathcote,Jennifer Y. F. Lau,Jemma Todd,Stefaan Van Damme,Dimitri M.L. Van Ryckeghem,Dimitri M.L. Van Ryckeghem,Dimitri M.L. Van Ryckeghem,Tine Vervoort +13 more
TL;DR: Findings support biases in both vigilance and attentional maintenance for pain-related stimuli but suggest attentional biases towards pain are ubiquitous and not related to pain status.
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Sex Differences Linking Pain-Related Fear and Interoceptive Hypervigilance: Attentional Biases to Conditioned Threat and Safety Signals in a Visceral Pain Model.
TL;DR: Results provide first evidence that pain-related fear conditioning may induce attentional biases differentially in healthy women and men, and suggest sex differences may play a role in attentional mechanisms underlying hypervigilance, and may be modulated by psychological vulnerability factors relevant to chronic visceral pain.
References
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Performance incentives and means: How regulatory focus influences goal attainment.
TL;DR: For instance, this paper showed that individuals' promotion-related ideal strength increases, and performance on an anagram task is greater for a monetary task incentive framed in terms of gains and nongains (i.e., promotion framed), whereas the reverse is true as individuals' prevention-related ought strength increases.
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Development of the Fear of Pain Questionnaire-III
TL;DR: This article describes the development and refinement of the Fear of Pain Questionnaire (FPQ), which exists in its most current form as the FPQ-III, which consists of Severe Pain, Minor Pain, and Medical Pain subscales.
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Cognitive-processing bias in chronic pain: a review and integration.
Tamar Pincus,Stephen Morley +1 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that biases in information processing in chronic pain are the result of overlap between 3 schemas: pain, illness, and self, and processing biases that extend beyond this healthy and adaptive process to enmesh the self-schema with pain and illness schemas could maintain and exacerbate distress and illness behavior in patients with chronic pain.
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Experimental Economics From the Vantage‐point of Behavioural Economics
TL;DR: Experimental economics and behavioural economics have much in common as mentioned in this paper, and there is a good cause for synergistic coexistence; however, there is often value in obtaining another field's perspective on what one does.
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Keeping pain in mind: a motivational account of attention to pain
TL;DR: It is argued that pain always has to be considered within a context of goal pursuit, and this motivational perspective offers a powerful framework to explain inter- and intra-individual differences in the deployment of attention to pain-related information.