Results 131 to 140 of about 108,071 (278)

I doubt it is safe: A meta-analysis of self-reported intolerance of uncertainty and threat extinction training Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience Post-doc/Scientist

open access: yes
Intolerance of uncertainty (IU), the tendency to find uncertainty distressing, is an important transdiagnostic dimension in mental health disorders. Higher self-reported IU has been linked to poorer threat extinction training (i.e., the updating of threat to safe associations), a key process that is targeted in exposure-based therapies.
Jayne Morriss   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Nocebo hyperalgesia in patients with fibromyalgia and healthy controls: An experimental investigation of conditioning and extinction processes at baseline and one-month follow-up - Preprint Associate professor of health psychology

open access: yes
Nocebo effects are adverse treatment outcomes that are not ascribed to active treatment components. Potentially, their magnitude might be higher in chronic pain patients compared to healthy controls since patients likely experience treatment failure more frequently.
Merve Karacaoglu   +8 more
openaire   +1 more source

Belief in a Norm‐Consistent Climate Policy Conspiracy Theory and Non‐Normative Collective Action

open access: yesJournal of Applied Social Psychology, Volume 55, Issue 5, Page 343-358, May 2025.
ABSTRACT Believing in conspiracy theories is connected to support for non‐normative collective action. One explanation might be that this is due to both being non‐normative. Alternatively, it might be the case that non‐normative action appears justified based on what conspiracy theories alleging harm to a personally relevant group due to powerholders ...
Lotte Pummerer   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Annual Research Review: What processes are dysregulated among emotionally dysregulated youth? – a systematic review

open access: yesJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, Volume 66, Issue 4, Page 516-546, April 2025.
Proliferation of the term “emotion dysregulation” in child psychopathology parallels the growing interest in processes that influence negative emotional reactivity. While it commonly refers to a clinical phenotype where intense anger leads to behavioral dyscontrol, the term implies etiology because anything that is dysregulated requires an impaired ...
Joseph C. Blader   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Environmental Awareness and Happiness [PDF]

open access: yes
The focus of this paper is on the relationship between an individual's environmental attitudes (or awareness) and well-being. We use an ordered probit model to examine the relationship between individual measures of subjective well-being and ...
Ada Ferrer-i-Carbonell, John M. Gowdy
core  

Lawnmower Poetry and the Poetry of Lawnmowers

open access: yes
Critical Quarterly, EarlyView.
Francesca Gardner
wiley   +1 more source

Annual Research Review: Neural mechanisms of eating disorders in youth – from current theory and findings to future directions

open access: yesJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, EarlyView.
Eating disorders are prevalent and profoundly debilitating psychiatric conditions with multifactorial etiology that frequently manifest during adolescence. This developmental stage is characterized by significant neurostructural and neurofunctional change, which may create a context conducive to the emergence of eating pathology.
Kelsey Hagan   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Expert Memories: The Professional Construction of the Past and the Mnemonic Making of Occupations

open access: yesJournal of Management Studies, EarlyView.
Abstract This article introduces the special issue on occupations and memory in organizations. To foster increasing collaboration from scholars from both fields, we offer a general argument connecting memory and occupations on two levels. At the societal level, we show how memory experts, such as historians, archivists, and museologists, have played a ...
Diego M. Coraiola   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

Connecting the Dots: Associative Transfer and Inference at 6 Months of Age. [PDF]

open access: yesDev Psychobiol
ABSTRACT Infants continuously pick up incidental information about their environmental surroundings, expressing only a small fraction of what they learn. The present experiments examined whether 6‐month‐olds can transfer learning between stimuli they never see together through mnemonic networks.
Townsend DA, Learmonth AE, Cuevas K.
europepmc   +2 more sources

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy