A flicker paradigm for inducing change blindness reveals alcohol and cannabis information processing biases in social users.
about
Implicit cognition and addiction: a tool for explaining paradoxical behaviorThe motivational salience of cigarette-related stimuli among former, never, and current smokers.Attention to smoking-related and incongruous objects during scene viewingAttentional bias toward cigarette cues in active smokersThe Neurocognitive Mechanisms of Decision-making, Impulse Control, and Loss of Willpower to Resist Drugs.Cognitive manifestations of drinking-smoking associations: preliminary findings with a cross-primed Stroop taskReaching out towards cannabis: approach-bias in heavy cannabis users predicts changes in cannabis use.Infants' physical knowledge affects their change detection.Time course of attentional bias for gambling information in problem gambling.Relationship between alcohol dependence, escape drinking, and early neural attention to alcohol-related cues.Attentional bias modification for addictive behaviors: clinical implications.A flicker change blindness task employing eye tracking reveals an association with levels of craving not consumption.Development of a repeated measures affective change blindness task.The scene and the unseen: manipulating photographs for experiments on change blindness and scene memory: image manipulation for change blindness.Exploring the performance differences on the flicker task and the conners' continuous performance test in adults with ADHD.Alcoholism and the Loss of Willpower: A Neurocognitive Perspective.Cannabis intoxication inhibits avoidance action tendencies: a field study in the Amsterdam coffee shops.A pictorial Stroop paradigm reveals an alcohol attentional bias in heavier compared to lighter social drinkers.The search for new ways to change implicit alcohol-related cognitions in heavy drinkers.Craving and cognitive biases for alcohol cues in social drinkers.Attentional bias to smoking and other motivationally relevant cues is affected by nicotine exposure and dose expectancy.Who is pre-occupied with sleep? A comparison of attention bias in people with psychophysiological insomnia, delayed sleep phase syndrome and good sleepers using the induced change blindness paradigm.Expert image analysts show enhanced visual processing in change detection.Drivers' and non-drivers' performance in a change detection task with static driving scenes: is there a benefit of experience?Free will in addictive behaviors: A matter of definition.Attenuation of change blindness in children with autism spectrum disorders.Effects of acute alcohol consumption on alcohol-related cognitive biases in light and heavy drinkers are task-dependent.A different kind of weapon focus: simulated training with ballistic weapons reduces change blindness.Time course of attention for alcohol cues in abstinent alcoholic patients: the role of initial orienting.Testing a frequency of exposure hypothesis in attentional bias for alcohol-related stimuli amongst social drinkers.
P2860
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P2860
A flicker paradigm for inducing change blindness reveals alcohol and cannabis information processing biases in social users.
description
2003 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2003年の論文
@ja
2003年論文
@yue
2003年論文
@zh-hant
2003年論文
@zh-hk
2003年論文
@zh-mo
2003年論文
@zh-tw
2003年论文
@wuu
2003年论文
@zh
2003年论文
@zh-cn
name
A flicker paradigm for inducin ...... essing biases in social users.
@en
type
label
A flicker paradigm for inducin ...... essing biases in social users.
@en
prefLabel
A flicker paradigm for inducin ...... essing biases in social users.
@en
P2093
P2860
P1433
P1476
A flicker paradigm for inducin ...... essing biases in social users.
@en
P2093
Barry T Jones
Ben C Jones
Helena Smith
Nicola Copley
P2860
P304
P356
10.1046/J.1360-0443.2003.00270.X
P407
P577
2003-02-01T00:00:00Z