scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P50 | author | Karin Mogg | Q61607126 |
Christina Liossi | Q42305808 | ||
Brendan P. Bradley | Q46131363 | ||
P2093 | author name string | Daniel E Schoth | |
P2860 | cites work | Hypervigilance and attentional fixedness in chronic musculoskeletal pain: consistency of findings across modified stroop and dot-probe tasks. | Q50960280 |
When sex hurts, anxiety and fear orient attention towards pain. | Q50964101 | ||
Measurement of the experience of living with primary recurrent headache. | Q50968013 | ||
Modification of attentional biases in chronic pain patients: a preliminary study. | Q50987446 | ||
Personalized pain words and Stroop interference in chronic pain patients. | Q51019429 | ||
Selective attentional bias, conscious awareness and the fear of pain. | Q51021955 | ||
Selective attention for pain-related information in healthy individuals: the role of pain and fear. | Q51041589 | ||
Do patients with chronic pain selectively attend to pain-related information?: preliminary evidence for the mediating role of fear. | Q51101558 | ||
Reexamining the factor structure of the 20-item Toronto alexithymia scale: commentary on Gignac, Palmer, and Stough. | Q51897350 | ||
A comparison of the relative utility of coping and acceptance-based measures in a sample of chronic pain sufferers. | Q51959868 | ||
Health anxiety, anxiety sensitivity, and attentional biases for pictorial and linguistic health-threat cues. | Q53100878 | ||
Threat-related attentional bias in anxious and nonanxious individuals: a meta-analytic study | Q28281662 | ||
Anxiety sensitivity index: normative data and its differentiation from trait anxiety | Q30625140 | ||
Pain demands attention: a cognitive-affective model of the interruptive function of pain | Q33647449 | ||
The twenty-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale--I. Item selection and cross-validation of the factor structure | Q34337085 | ||
Cognitive-processing bias in chronic pain: a review and integration | Q34363359 | ||
The modified Stroop paradigm as a measure of selective attention towards pain-related stimuli among chronic pain patients: a meta-analysis. | Q34772664 | ||
Acceptance and change in the context of chronic pain | Q35744849 | ||
Dot-probe evaluation of selective attentional processing of pain cues in patients with chronic headaches | Q38416917 | ||
Attentional biases for negative information in induced and naturally occurring dysphoria | Q38454851 | ||
Is high fear of pain associated with attentional biases for pain-related or general threat? A categorical reanalysis | Q40253853 | ||
The role of fear of movement and injury in selective attentional processing in patients with chronic low back pain: a dot-probe evaluation | Q40423174 | ||
Attentional biases for negative interpersonal stimuli in clinical depression | Q40528409 | ||
Factor structure and stability of the Anxiety Sensitivity Index in a longitudinal study of anxiety disorder patients | Q40535608 | ||
Selective attention and avoidance of pain-related stimuli: a dot-probe evaluation in a pain-free population. | Q40548990 | ||
Alexithymia, emotion, and somatic complaints | Q40694347 | ||
Cognitive approaches to emotion and emotional disorders | Q40728937 | ||
Modelling cognition in emotional disorder: the S-REF model | Q41303324 | ||
Acceptance of the unpleasant reality of chronic pain: effects upon attention to pain and engagement with daily activities | Q43581048 | ||
Factor Structure of the Beck Depression Inventory-II in patients With chronic pain | Q43691870 | ||
Acceptance of chronic pain: component analysis and a revised assessment method | Q44722579 | ||
Selective attention to pain-related information in chronic musculoskeletal pain patients | Q47618447 | ||
Can't shake that feeling: event-related fMRI assessment of sustained amygdala activity in response to emotional information in depressed individuals | Q48619150 | ||
A cognitive-motivational analysis of anxiety | Q48715815 | ||
P433 | issue | 9 | |
P921 | main subject | headache | Q86 |
bias | Q742736 | ||
chronic headache | Q2495736 | ||
attention | Q6501338 | ||
P304 | page(s) | 963-969 | |
P577 | publication date | 2008-12-13 | |
P1433 | published in | European Journal of Pain | Q4548992 |
P1476 | title | Time-course of attentional bias for pain-related cues in chronic daily headache sufferers | |
P478 | volume | 13 |
Q47758295 | Attentional bias modification for acute experimental pain: A randomized controlled trial of retraining early versus later attention on pain severity, threshold and tolerance. |
Q39408466 | Attentional bias modification in people with chronic pain: a proof of concept study |
Q35921744 | Attentional bias to pain and social threat in pediatric patients with functional abdominal pain and pain-free youth before and after performance evaluation |
Q37747645 | Cancer pain: part 2: physical, interventional and complimentary therapies; management in the community; acute, treatment-related and complex cancer pain: a perspective from the British Pain Society endorsed by the UK Association of Palliative Medici |
Q50628832 | Combined cognitive biases for pain and disability information in individuals with chronic headache: A preliminary investigation. |
Q44395891 | Do episodic migraineurs selectively attend to headache-related visual stimuli? |
Q47898958 | Electrodermal responses and memory recall in migraineurs and headache-free controls. |
Q47808040 | Eye movements during visual search for emotional faces in individuals with chronic headache |
Q89837861 | Internet-delivered attentional bias modification training (iABMT) for the management of chronic musculoskeletal pain: a protocol for a randomised controlled trial |
Q37179926 | Keeping an eye on pain: investigating visual attention biases in individuals with chronic pain using eye-tracking methodology |
Q33640145 | Pain-related and negative semantic priming enhances perceived pain intensity |
Q35669801 | Painful faces-induced attentional blink modulated by top-down and bottom-up mechanisms |
Q57213513 | The relationship between alexithymia and headache impact: the role of somatization and pain catastrophizing |
Q38454366 | The role of threat expectancy in attentional bias and thermal pain perception in healthy individuals |
Q47380808 | Threat and fear of pain induces attentional bias to pain words: An eye-tracking study |
Q50683299 | Time-course of attentional bias for threat-related cues in patients with chronic daily headache-tension type: evidence for the role of anger. |
Search more.