Implicit measures of association in psychopathology research.
about
Implicit alcohol associations, especially drinking identity, predict drinking over timeCharacterizing implicit mental health associations across clinical domains.Attempted Training of Alcohol Approach and Drinking Identity Associations in US Undergraduate Drinkers: Null Results from Two Studies.Habit doesn't make the predictions stronger: implicit alcohol associations and habitualness predict drinking uniquely.Applying the Quadruple Process model to evaluate change in implicit attitudinal responses during therapy for panic disorder.Wounds that can't be seen: implicit trauma associations predict posttraumatic stress disorder symptomsImplicit drinking identity: Drinker+me associations predict college student drinking consistently.I drink therefore I am: validating alcohol-related implicit association tests.Predictive Validity of Explicit and Implicit Threat Overestimation in Contamination Fear.Pick your poison: stimuli selection in alcohol-related implicit measuresAutomaticity in anxiety disorders and major depressive disorderNeurobehavioural correlates of body mass index and eating behaviours in adults: a systematic review.The developmental psychopathology of alcohol use and alcohol disorders: research achievements and future directions.The effect of social desirability on reported motivation, substance use severity, and treatment attendanceEffectiveness, relapse prevention and mechanisms of change of cognitive therapy vs. interpersonal therapy for depression: Study protocol for a randomised controlled trialAttentional bias to drug cues is elevated before and during temptations to use heroin and cocaine.On the relationship between the indirectly measured attitude towards beer and beer consumption: the role of attitude accessibility.The effects of verbal information and approach-avoidance training on children's fear-related responses.Development and Validation of a Self-Report Measure of Mentalizing: The Reflective Functioning Questionnaire.Watch the target! Effects in the affective misattribution procedure become weaker (but not eliminated) when participants are motivated to provide accurate responses to the target.Incidental rewarding cues influence economic decisions in people with obesityHooked on a feeling: affective anti-smoking messages are more effective than cognitive messages at changing implicit evaluations of smokingImplicitly assessed attitudes toward body shape and food: the moderating roles of dietary restraint and disinhibition.Understanding and shifting drug-related decisions: contributions of automatic decision-making processes.Predicting return of fear following exposure therapy with an implicit measure of attitudes.Implicit and explicit drug-related cognitions during detoxification treatment are associated with drug relapse: an ecological momentary assessment study.Implicit Associations and Explicit Expectancies toward Cannabis in Heavy Cannabis Users and ControlsAlcohol dependent patients have weak negative rather than strong positive implicit alcohol associationsThe Effects of Obesity-Related Health Messages on Explicit and Implicit Weight Bias.Automatic Approach Tendencies toward High and Low Caloric Food in Restrained Eaters: Influence of Task-Relevance and Mood.Motivational Mechanisms and Outcome Expectancies Underlying the Approach Bias toward Addictive Substances.Of mice and men: what animal research can tell us about context effects on automatic responses in humans.Worry or craving? A selective review of evidence for food-related attention biases in obese individuals, eating-disorder patients, restrained eaters and healthy samples.Evaluating the Relationship between Explicit and Implicit Drinking Identity Centrality and Hazardous Drinking.Attentional Bias and Approach/Avoidance Tendencies Do Not Predict Relapse or Time to Relapse in Alcohol Dependency.Unreliable Yet Still Replicable: A Comment on LeBel and Paunonen (2011).Effects of Chocolate Deprivation on Implicit and Explicit Evaluation of Chocolate in High and Low Trait Chocolate Cravers.Effect of e-cigarette advertisements and antismoking messages on explicit and implicit attitudes towards tobacco and e-cigarette smoking in 18-65-year-olds: a randomised controlled study protocol.Implicit health associations across the adult lifespan.Failures to induce implicit evaluations by means of approach-avoid training.
P2860
Q30276156-DC7F02E5-AE20-47BB-80C4-69DCC8D339BCQ30277175-FAB630BB-496F-4458-8815-EBF6260C32AAQ30278912-5A774E82-DC91-4019-9B55-067F2C4B5F74Q30300832-A891C236-EDAB-4655-AA31-547ED84611E7Q30408746-4834E137-5240-47D2-823A-0DF4F7B8F799Q30409308-E0A12189-22DC-4E43-948A-0F05F215D85CQ30413243-7D1D4E12-AF96-427D-A8C6-F03605102415Q30414630-BBE27978-FE0F-45C0-9BF1-B0FBC7A031E7Q30415529-9449A2D4-1809-4A48-AFE8-2550FD03D2C7Q30417805-BFF9B8C8-F249-4CDD-ACA0-FD61CA6F0D8BQ30417860-388D1C42-BD0E-41C8-9EE9-2455FDFD5EADQ30577845-520F3156-D8DA-4EC4-B642-56B8033131C0Q33842150-2582FBF7-0680-44F7-8DDE-7D40040E7210Q34236137-D9120B62-B740-48B5-A958-35BB68ECD067Q35105586-E9DE8304-F2CA-427A-BBD3-7697EAA876E7Q35150436-922F2542-FFA8-4A03-977C-C5A1EF633A28Q35158998-36CA1A01-CF40-4691-AB2E-858BAED27B4FQ35597776-653753EF-F4F5-4CCE-A5E8-D71A03AEE548Q36071697-32B947B3-81D3-48F3-957A-AEDCF5F8210EQ36097749-DF30E4E1-D5A3-45E0-9DC1-78032EE71B2AQ36162364-AF507C4A-AAC5-4B7F-B0A0-5E8E74845B30Q36197767-B96FC677-A036-40A6-9334-1C30E709BBAFQ36354222-352C16B0-0D8E-42BE-88DD-7E80C9BEF5ACQ36385609-55D8920E-CB8F-40FF-9680-6D07DA6AF3B6Q36400043-0048F0EA-46AB-41CC-B8FB-5F94BB6F97C3Q36589064-47D4D4B3-F8F0-444F-B1B8-B917C1712EE5Q36945500-53681587-0A7C-488F-A066-B72AE97A2776Q37054430-FADF41D4-08EE-48FC-8860-3E8259B4C889Q37578199-E2CF7C25-033A-4574-AF03-9A17FA227B05Q37747196-64E87185-4231-4656-A2CC-D9F0C4C48B22Q38058322-4F7C4C19-EA4F-4C26-84D0-DE55FE29C797Q38087440-6BBDD38B-F7C7-4E67-A0C5-15BA5F318C99Q38259722-3807206C-6A42-4584-A521-D3E2B7EE5BB8Q38672160-9930B2F3-29B2-48F7-8BC9-AE1A88714C4BQ38977105-E4FFAF5E-FC52-4159-93CE-828212410EB5Q40080039-5A42325C-096F-4EA8-874B-03B83A5A4B37Q41684783-06B42FB3-4672-41DD-86FE-8BC89FDDB3FAQ42368597-60641A90-92A1-46C3-A113-5D00E70F00EAQ45061857-2610E283-3EF5-47BB-BE0C-07F1F6FD60ECQ45251372-E75C5413-2466-4D46-B13E-0B09516E42DE
P2860
Implicit measures of association in psychopathology research.
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
@tr
scientific article published on January 2011
@en
vedecký článok
@sk
vetenskaplig artikel
@sv
videnskabelig artikel
@da
vědecký článek
@cs
name
Implicit measures of association in psychopathology research.
@en
Implicit measures of association in psychopathology research.
@nl
type
label
Implicit measures of association in psychopathology research.
@en
Implicit measures of association in psychopathology research.
@nl
prefLabel
Implicit measures of association in psychopathology research.
@en
Implicit measures of association in psychopathology research.
@nl
P2093
P50
P356
P1476
Implicit measures of association in psychopathology research.
@en
P2093
Anita T M Jansen
Colin M MacLeod
Fren T Y Smulders
P304
P356
10.1037/A0021729
P577
2011-01-01T00:00:00Z