5 results match your criteria: "the Netherlands. Electronic address: Pauline.Dibbets@Maastrichtuniversity.nl.[Affiliation]"

Most experimental avoidance paradigms lack either control over the experimental situation or simplify real-life avoidance behavior to a great extent, making it difficult to generalize the results to the complex approach-avoidance situations that anxious individuals face in daily life. The current study aimed to examine the usability of our recently developed free-exploratory avoidance paradigm in Virtual Reality (VR) that allows for the assessment of subjective as well as behavioral avoidance in participants with varying levels of spider fear. In a VR escape room, participants searched for cues to decipher a code-locked door.

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Filthy fruit! Confirmation bias and novel food.

Appetite

December 2021

Department of Clinical Psychological Science, Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience, Maastricht University, Maastricht, P.O. Box 616; 6200MD Maastricht, the Netherlands.

Fruit and vegetable consumption is worldwide too low, resulting in poor diet quality and health-related problems. A cognitive factor that might contribute to this low consumption is confirmation bias. Confirmation bias has been established in anxiety research and comprises the tendency to search for reinforcing negative information, while ignoring counter attitudinal information.

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Background And Objectives: Most people are exposed to a violent or life-threatening situation during their lives, but only a minority develops a stress-related disorder. To examine risk factors for the development of stress-related symptoms, such as intrusions and avoidance, analogue trauma studies are necessary. The often-used trauma film paradigm has proven to be valuable to examine intrusions, but inherently to its technique is less suitable for assessing behavioral avoidance, a core symptom of stress-related disorders.

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Background And Objectives: It is assumed that fear responses can be altered by changing the contingency between a conditioned stimulus (CS) and an unconditioned stimulus (US), or by devaluing the present mental representation of the US. The aim of the present study was to compare the efficacy of contingency- and devaluation-based intervention techniques on the diminishment in - and return of fear. We hypothesized that extinction (EXT, contingency-based) would outperform devaluation-based techniques regarding contingency measures, but that devaluation-based techniques would be most effective in reducing the mental representation of the US.

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The influence of stimulus valence on confirmation bias in children.

J Behav Ther Exp Psychiatry

March 2017

Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience, Maastricht University, The Netherlands. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to explore how fear influences children's tendency to seek positive or negative information about animals, replicating previous findings.
  • Children aged 9-13 viewed images of a friendly animal (quokka) and a scary one (aye aye), with results showing that they viewed the aye aye as more threatening and sought more negative information about it.
  • Higher levels of fear were linked to more negative information searching overall, while lower fear levels regarding the quokka led to an increase in searching for positive information, highlighting how perceptions of danger can shape information-seeking behaviors.
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