1,349 results match your criteria: "Department of Experimental Clinical and Health Psychology[Affiliation]"
J Sex Marital Ther
September 2024
Department of Experimental Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Increasing evidence shows that survivors of sexual violence frequently experience relationship difficulties following their victimization. Little is known regarding how couples which formed post-assault cope with the impact of the prior assault. Hence, the aim of the current study was to gain insight into post-assault formed couples' experiences in coping with the impact of sexual violence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCogn Emot
July 2024
Research Group of Quantitative Psychology and Individual Differences, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Western society generally highly values happiness. As a result, people sometimes experience pressure not to feel negative emotions. In this study, we comprehensively investigated this pressure, and how it manifests itself, in adult romantic relationships.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Psychol Rev
August 2024
Persistent Pain Research Group, Hopwood Centre for Neurobiology, South Australian Medical Research Institute (SAHMRI), Adelaide, Australia; IIMPACT in Health, University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia. Electronic address:
Perception has been conceptualised as an active and adaptive process, based upon incoming sensory inputs, which are modified by top-down factors such as cognitions. Visuospatial perception is thought to be scaled based on threat, with highly threatening objects or contexts visually inflated to promote escape or avoidance behaviours. This meta-analytical systematic review quantified the effect and evidence quality of threat-evoked visuospatial scaling, as well as how visuospatial scaling relates to affordances (perceived action capabilities) and behavioural avoidance/escape outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEmotion
June 2024
Department of Social Psychology, University of Amsterdam.
When in distress, people often seek help in regulating their emotions by sharing them with others. Paradoxically, although people perceive such social sharing as beneficial, it often fails to promote emotional recovery. This may be explained by people seeking-and eliciting-emotional support, which offers only momentary relief.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pain
October 2024
School of Psychology A18, Faculty of Science, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
The attentional bias literature has consistently failed to take context into account. We developed a novel paradigm in immersive virtual reality (VR) with pain stimuli where it would be adaptive or nonadaptive to attend to the stimuli. Participants had to indicate the location of the stimuli.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCortex
August 2024
Berlin School of Mind and Brain, Department of Psychology, Humboldt University of Berlin, Berlin, Germany; Department of Experimental Psychology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Instructions allow us to fulfill novel and complex tasks on the first try. This skill has been linked to preparatory brain signals that encode upcoming demands in advance, facilitating novel performance. To deepen insight into these processes, we explored whether instructions pre-activated task-relevant motoric and perceptual neural states.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeerJ
June 2024
Department of Clinical Psychological Science, University of Maastricht, Maastricht, Netherlands.
BMJ Open
June 2024
Department of Experimental-Clinical and Health Psychology, Universiteit Gent, Gent, Belgium.
Objective: To explore and characterise the discrimination and racism experienced in healthcare from the perspective of Dutch patients with a migration background.
Design: This was a qualitative phenomenological study incorporating an inductive thematic analysis of the answers provided to a free form online survey. Descriptive and differential analyses were conducted for the closed-ended questions.
J Pain
October 2024
Section Experimental Health Psychology, Department of Clinical Psychological Science, Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands; Institute for Health and Behaviour, INSIDE, University of Luxembourg, Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg; Department of Experimental Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium. Electronic address:
Contemporary pain models highlight cognitive-processing biases (ie, attention bias [AB], interpretation bias [IB], and memory bias [MB]) as key processes that contribute to poor pain outcomes. However, existing research has yielded inconsistent findings regarding the presence and impact of these biases on pain outcomes. Recognizing the need to explore these biases simultaneously, contemporary pain models suggest that cognitive biases (CBs) are interrelated, and may have a combined impact upon pain problems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
May 2024
Department of Public Health and Primary Care, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Objective: Studies on resilience in advanced cancer caregiving typically focus on the interplay between resilience-promoting resources and coping strategies that may be associated with resilience. However, no studies have investigated the emergence of trajectories of resilience and distress in individuals confronted with a cancer diagnosis of a loved one.
Methods: Ideal-type analysis, a method for constructing typologies from qualitative data, was used to identify trajectories involving resilience or the lack thereof based on fifty-four interviews conducted with seventeen partners of patients recently diagnosed with advanced cancer over a period of three years.
Biol Psychol
July 2024
Department of Experimental Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University, Belgium; EXPLORA, Ghent University, Belgium.
The perception of biological motion is an important social cognitive ability. Models of biological motion perception recognize two processes that contribute to the perception of biological motion: a bottom-up process that binds optic-flow patterns into a coherent percept of biological motion and a top-down process that binds sequences of body-posture 'snapshots' over time into a fluent percept of biological motion. The vast majority of studies on autism and biological motion perception have used point-light figure stimuli, which elicit biological motion perception predominantly via bottom-up processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Struct Funct
July 2024
Department of Experimental-Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Previous research reported reversal of the prototypical brain torque in individuals with mirrored visceral topology (situs inversus totalis, SIT). Here, we investigate if typical asymmetry of the posterior intracranial venous system is also reversed in SIT and whether the direction and magnitude of this asymmetry is related to the direction and magnitude of the brain torque. Brain structural MRI images of 38 participants with SIT were compared with those of 38 matched control participants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Oncol Nurs
June 2024
End-of-Life Care Research Group, Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), Brussels, Belgium & Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Purpose: Parental cancer brings changes and challenges which affect the whole family. Evidence shows heightened psychosocial risk among the offspring. Research among adolescents and young adults (AYAs) facing parental cancer has mainly focused on these psychosocial problems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Res Ther
August 2024
Addiction Development and Psychopathology (ADAPT) Lab, Department of Psychology, and Centre for Urban Mental Health, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Cognitive bias modification (CBM) has evolved from an experimental method testing cognitive mechanisms of psychopathology to a promising tool for accessible digital mental health care. While we are still discovering the conditions under which clinically relevant effects occur, the dire need for accessible, effective, and low-cost mental health tools underscores the need for implementation where such tools are available. Providing our expert opinion as Association for Cognitive Bias Modification members, we first discuss the readiness of different CBM approaches for clinical implementation, then discuss key considerations with regard to implementation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCognition
August 2024
Social Intelligence Lab, Department of Psychology & The Berlin School of Mind & Brain, Humboldt University of Berlin, Berlin, Germany. Electronic address:
It is well-established that people tend to mimic one another's actions, a crucial aspect of social interactions. Anticipating imitation has been shown to boost motor activation and reaction times for congruent actions. However, prior research predominantly focused on dyads, leaving gaps in our knowledge regarding group dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Rev Neurol
July 2024
Department of Experimental-Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
No two human brains are alike, and with the rise of precision medicine in neurology, we are seeing an increased emphasis on understanding the individual variability in brain structure and function that renders every brain unique. Functional and structural brain asymmetries are a fundamental principle of brain organization, and recent research suggests substantial individual variability in these asymmetries that needs to be considered in clinical practice. In this Review, we provide an overview of brain asymmetries, variations in such asymmetries and their relevance in the clinical context.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutism Res
June 2024
Department of Experimental Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is associated with life-long challenges with social cognition, and one of its earliest and most common manifestations is atypical joint attention, which is a pivotal skill in social-cognitive and linguistic development. Early interventions for ASD children often focus on training initiation of joint attention (IJA) and response to joint attention bids (RJA), which are important for social communication and cognition. Here, we used functional near-infrared spectroscopy and behavioral measures to test typically developing (TD, n = 17) and ASD children (n = 18), to address the relationship between the neural correlates of RJA and social-communicative behavior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutism Dev Lang Impair
May 2024
Research in Developmental Disorders Lab, Department of Experimental-Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Background & Aims: Language abilities of autistic children and children at elevated likelihood for autism (EL-siblings) are highly heterogeneous, and many of them develop language deficits. It is as of yet unclear why language abilities of autistic children and EL-siblings vary, although an interaction of multiple influential factors is likely at play. In this review, we describe research articles that identify one or multiple of such factors associated with the receptive or expressive language abilities of autistic children and EL-siblings since the introduction of the .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
May 2024
Psychopathology and Affective Neuroscience Lab (PANlab), Department of Experimental Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University, Henri Dunantlaan 2, 9000, Gent, Belgium.
Theories of rumination have proposed different psychological factors to place one at risk for repetitive negative thinking. A comprehensive empirical test that captures the most relevant contributors to rumination is lacking. Building on influential self-regulatory and metacognitive frameworks, we modeled how key constructs in this context relate to ruminative thinking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform
July 2024
Department of Experimental Psychology, Ghent University.
Task-irrelevant stimuli often capture our attention despite our best efforts to ignore them. It has been noted that tasks involving perceptually complex displays can lead to reduced interference from distractors. The mechanism behind this effect is debated, with some accounts emphasizing the "perceptual load" of the stimuli themselves and others emphasizing the role of proactive control.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPain
October 2024
Department of Experimental-Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Eur J Neurosci
July 2024
Department of Experimental Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Extensive research has shown that observers are able to efficiently extract summary information from groups of people. However, little is known about the cues that determine whether multiple people are represented as a social group or as independent individuals. Initial research on this topic has primarily focused on the role of static cues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Psychol (Amst)
June 2024
Research in Individual Differences and Legal Psychology (RIDDLE) Lab, Department of Psychology, Babeș-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania; Department of Social & Human Research, Romanian Academy, Cluj-Napoca, Romania. Electronic address:
Affective flexibility is defined as a complex executive function which enables individuals to successfully alternate between distinct emotional and non-emotional features of a given situation in order to attain a specific goal. A large body of research has focused exclusively on flexibility in a non-emotional context, although most of our interactions with our environment are emotionally satiated. Our main aim was to propose a hierarchical framework to describe this construct from a macro-level perspective to a more nuanced and micro-level perspective, including three different levels of affective flexibility: elementary, shifting, and generative.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQual Life Res
July 2024
Laboratory of Brain Imaging Research, Nencki Institute, Warsaw, Poland.
Purpose: The menopausal transition brings with it many physical, cognitive, and affective changes in a woman's life, impacting quality of life. Whereas prior work has examined impact on general mental health and cognitive function, research on basic affective processing during menopause remains scarce.
Methods: Using a median-split procedure, this pre-registered study examined the impact of stronger (N = 46 women) vs.
Clin Psychol Rev
June 2024
School of Psychology, Faculty of Science, The University of Sydney, Australia.
Attention biases towards disease-relevant cues have been implicated in numerous disorders and health conditions, such as anxiety, cancer, drug-use disorders, and chronic pain. Attention bias modification (ABM) has shown that changing attention biases can change related emotional processes. ABM most commonly uses a modified dot-probe task, which has received increasing criticism regarding its reliability and inconsistent findings.
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