Search results for "fear"

showing 10 items of 273 documents

Alexithymia and Adult Attachment: Investigating the Mediating Role of Fear of Intimacy and Negative Mood Regulation Expectancies

2021

Literature suggests an association between alexithymia and insecure adult attachment, but the mediation factors involved in this relationship are under-investigated. The study was carried out to test the possible mediation roles of the fear of intimacy and negative mood regulation expectancies in explaining this relationship. A convenience sample of 258 Polish adults (mean age: 30; 45% male), completed self-reporting measures related to adult attachment (RAAS), alexithymia (TAS-20), fear of intimacy (FIS) and negative mood regulation expectancies (NMRE). The results showed that alexithymia directly and indirectly predicts insecure adult attachment. Alexithymia positively predicts the fear …

AdultMaleAlexithymiaMediation (statistics)Sexual Behavior050109 social psychologyConvenience sample050105 experimental psychologyFear of intimacyadult attachmentAlexithymiaIntervention (counseling)adult attachment; Alexithymia; fear of intimacy; negative mood regulationmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAffective SymptomsAssociation (psychology)General Psychology05 social sciencesMean ageFearfear of intimacynegative mood regulationmedicine.diseaseObject AttachmentNegative moodAffectFemalePsychologyClinical psychologyPsychological Reports
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Anxiety and facial self-contacts: possible impact on COVID-19 transmission in dental practice

2021

Abstract Background The purpose was to analyse the associations between dental and trait anxiety, fear of COVID-19 and the duration and frequency of spontaneous hand-to-face contact (self-contact). Methods A cross-sectional design was carried out with 128 adult patients from four dental clinics in Madrid, during the confinement, from March 15 to May 15. The patients’ movements in the waiting room were monitored with Microsoft Kinect Software, also completed the Trait anxiety subscale of the STAI, the COVID-19 Fear and the S-DAI questionnaire. Results Associations were observed between the duration and frequency of facial, mask and eye contact with trait anxiety and dental fear was determine…

AdultMaleBiopsychosocial modelCross-sectional studyPopulationEye contactDental fearAnxietyDental fear03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSurveys and QuestionnairesDental AnxietymedicineHumansDents030212 general & internal medicineeducationGeneral Dentistryeducation.field_of_studySARS-CoV-2business.industryHigh riskResearchIncidence (epidemiology)COVID-19RK1-715030206 dentistrymedicine.diseaseAnsietatstomatognathic diseasesCross-Sectional StudiesTouchDentistryOral and maxillofacial surgeryAnxietyFemalemedicine.symptombusinessClinical psychologyBMC Oral Health
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Impact of Biomedical and Biopsychosocial Training Sessions on the Attitudes, Beliefs and Recommendations of Health Care Providers about Low Back Pain…

2011

The beliefs and attitudes of health care providers may contribute to chronic low back pain (LBP) disability, influencing the recommendations that they provide to their patients. An excessively biomedical style of undergraduate training can increase negative beliefs and attitudes about LBP, whereas instruction following a biopsychosocial model could possibly lessen these negative beliefs in health care professionals. The objectives of this study were to determine the effectiveness of 2 brief educational modules with different orientations (biomedical or biopsychosocial) on changing the beliefs and attitudes of physical therapy students and the recommendations that they give to patients. The …

AdultMaleBiopsychosocial modelHealth Knowledge Attitudes PracticeInservice TrainingAdolescentAttitude of Health PersonnelPsychological interventionYoung AdultSocial supportContinuing medical educationHealth careBack painHumansMedicinehealth care economics and organizationsbusiness.industrySocial SupportProfessional-Patient RelationsFear-avoidance modelequipment and suppliesLow back painBiomechanical PhenomenaPhysical TherapistsAnesthesiology and Pain MedicinePsicobiologiaNeurologyFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessLow Back Painhuman activitiesClinical psychology
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A ventral striatal prediction error signal in human fear extinction learning.

2021

Animal studies have shown that the prediction error (PE) signal that drives fear extinction learning is encoded by phasic activity of midbrain dopamine (DA) neurons. Thus, the extinction PE resembles the appetitive PE that drives reward learning. In humans, fear extinction learning is less well understood. Using computational neuroimaging, a previous study from our group reported hemodynamic activity in the left ventral putamen, a subregion of the ventral striatum (VS), to correlate with a PE function derived from a formal associative learning model. The activity was modulated by genetic variation in a DA-related gene. To conceptually replicate and extend this finding, we here asked whether…

AdultMaleCognitive NeuroscienceBiology050105 experimental psychologylcsh:RC321-571Extinction PsychologicalMidbrain03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineNeuroimagingDopaminemedicineHumansLearning0501 psychology and cognitive scienceslcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryPutamen05 social sciencesVentral striatumExtinction (psychology)FearGalvanic Skin ResponseMagnetic Resonance ImagingElectric StimulationAssociative learningmedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyVentral StriatumFemaleAnimal studiesNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPhotic Stimulationmedicine.drugForecastingNeuroImage
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Using Augmented Reality to Treat Phobias

2005

Virtual reality (VR) is useful for treating several psychological problems, including phobias such as fear of flying, agoraphobia, claustrophobia, and phobia to insects and small animals. We believe that augmented reality (AR) could also be used to treat some psychological disorders. AR and VR share some advantages over traditional treatments. However, AR gives a greater feeling of presence (the sensation of being there) and reality judgment (judging an experience as real) than VR because the environment and the elements the patient uses to interact with the application are real. Moreover, in AR users see their own hands, feet, and so on, whereas VR only simulates this experience. With thes…

AdultMaleComputer sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectCockroachesVirtual realitycomputer.software_genreFear of flyingUser-Computer InterfaceSensationComputer GraphicsmedicineAnimalsHumansComputer Simulationmedia_commonPhobiasMultimediaSpidersModels Theoreticalmedicine.diseaseComputer Graphics and Computer-Aided DesignTreatment OutcomeMultimediaPhobic DisordersFeelingTherapy Computer-AssistedClaustrophobiaFemaleAugmented realityDesensitization PsychologiccomputerSoftwareCognitive psychologyAgoraphobiaIEEE Computer Graphics and Applications
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Where There is Smoke There is Fear-Impaired Contextual Inhibition of Conditioned Fear in Smokers

2016

The odds-ratio of smoking is elevated in populations with neuropsychiatric diseases, in particular in the highly prevalent diagnoses of post-traumatic stress and anxiety disorders. Yet, the association between smoking and a key dimensional phenotype of these disorders—maladaptive deficits in fear learning and fear inhibition—is unclear. We therefore investigated acquisition and memory of fear and fear inhibition in healthy smoking and non-smoking participants (N=349, 22% smokers). We employed a well validated paradigm of context-dependent fear and safety learning (day 1) including a memory retrieval on day 2. During fear learning, a geometrical shape was associated with an aversive electric…

AdultMaleConditioning ClassicalStimulationContext (language use)Extinction Psychological03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicinemedicineHumansFear learningFear conditioningAssociation (psychology)PharmacologyExpectancy theorySmokersbusiness.industryFear conditioning ; Human behaviour ; Anxiety ; Addiction ; Post-traumatic stress disorderExtinction (psychology)FearGalvanic Skin ResponseElectric Stimulation030227 psychiatryPsychiatry and Mental healthInhibition PsychologicalCase-Control StudiesMental RecallAnxietyFemaleOriginal Articlemedicine.symptombusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical psychology
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Continuity and discontinuity in memory for threat.

2016

Using a paradigm that allows a quasi-continuous tracking of memory performance over time, two experiments were designed to test the hypotheses that (a) persons with a cognitively avoidant style of coping with threat manifest a dissociation between (intact) short-term and (reduced) long-term retrieval of aversive information and (b) persons with a vigilant coping style recall aversive information particularly well after long retention intervals, provided they are free to think about aversive events. Study 1 (N = 75) showed that avoiders manifest a poor memory for aversive pictures after long retention intervals only. Study 2 (N = 95) replicated this finding. In addition, manipulation of the …

AdultMaleCoping (psychology)Dissociation (neuropsychology)Adolescentmedia_common.quotation_subject050109 social psychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyRetention interval050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychologyYoung AdultArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)MemoryAdaptation PsychologicalDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesmedia_commonRecall05 social sciencesIndividual differenceFearMiddle AgedAnxietyFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyCognitive loadCognitive psychologyVigilance (psychology)Cognitionemotion
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Masculine Gender Role Stress

2003

Eisler and Blalock (Clin. Psychol. Rev. 11 (1991) 45) developed a cognitively mediated notion of Masculine Gender Role Stress (MGRS) which assumes that rigid commitment to masculine schemata for appraisal and coping with life's problems may both produce stress and result in dysfunctional coping patterns in men. Previous findings obtained in a non-clinical sample pointed to the ability of the MGRS General scale to predict different forms of irrational fears. Using a predominantly psychologically distressed sample, the present study replicated this finding. In addition, different subordinate concepts of MGRS (Physical inadequacy, Emotional inexpressiveness, Subordination to women, Intellectua…

AdultMaleDISORDERCoping (psychology)Obsessive-Compulsive DisorderPsychometricsAdolescentPersonality InventoryPsychometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectSelf-conceptExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyDysfunctional familyDISSIMULATIONDevelopmental psychologyPhobic disorderFEARSArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)phobic avoidanceCHECKERSmedicinePersonalityHumansIdentification PsychologicalMarriageAPPRAISALSCALEmedia_commonAgedMasculine Gender Role Stress (MGRS) scalePERSONALITYGender Identityobsessive-compulsive behaviourFearpredictionMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasegender role stressSelf ConceptPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyPhobic DisordersFemaleSEXPersonality Assessment InventoryPsychologySocial psychologyAnxiety disorderStress PsychologicalJournal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry
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Diagnostic delay in oral squamous cell carcinoma: the role of cognitive and psychological variables

2014

This retrospective study investigated, in two cohorts of subjects living in Southern Italy and awaiting treatment for oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), the variables related to diagnostic delay ascribable to the patient, with particular reference to the cognitive and psychological ones. A total of 156 patients with OSCC (mean age: 62 years, M/F: 2.39∶1) were recruited at the Universities of Palermo and Naples. Risk factors related to patient delay included: sociodemographic, health-related, cognitive and psychological variables. The analysis was conducted by considering two different delay ranges: dichotomous (≤1 month vs. >1 month) and polytomous (3 months) delay. Data were investigated…

AdultMaleHealth Knowledge Attitudes Practicemedicine.medical_specialtyPathologyDelayed DiagnosisMultivariate analysisdiagnosisHealth BehaviorPopulationDenial PsychologicalCohort StudiesCognitionSettore MED/28 - Malattie OdontostomatologicheInternal medicinemedicineHumanseducationGeneral DentistryAgedRetrospective StudiesAged 80 and overMouth neoplasmeducation.field_of_studybusiness.industryAge FactorsPolytomous Rasch modelRetrospective cohort studyFearOdds ratioAwarenessMiddle AgedConfidence intervaldiagnosiSocioeconomic FactorsOral squamous cell carcinomaCarcinoma Squamous CellOriginal ArticleFemaleMouth Neoplasmscognitive/psychological factorsbusinessAttitude to Healthpatient delayCohort studyInternational Journal of Oral Science
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Beyond the amygdala: Linguistic threat modulates peri-sylvian semantic access cortices

2015

In this study, healthy volunteers were scanned using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate the neural systems involved in processing the threatening content conveyed via visually presented “threat words.” The neural responses elicited by these words were compared to those elicited by matched neutral control words. The results demonstrate that linguistic threat, when presented in written form, can selectively engage areas of lateral temporal and inferior frontal cortex, distinct from the core language areas implicated in aphasia. Additionally, linguistic threat modulates neural activity in visceral/emotional systems (amygdala, parahippocampal gyrus and periaqueductal gr…

AdultMaleLinguistics and LanguageVisual perceptionAdolescentCognitive NeuroscienceNeocortexExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyAmygdalaBrain mappingArticleLanguage and LinguisticsYoung AdultSpeech and HearingFunctional neuroimagingAphasiaAphasiamedicineHumansPeriaqueductal GrayBrain MappingLanguage Testsmedicine.diagnostic_testFearAmygdalaMagnetic Resonance ImagingHealthy VolunteersLinguisticsFrontal LobeSemanticsmedicine.anatomical_structureFrontal lobeVisual PerceptionParahippocampal GyrusFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyFunctional magnetic resonance imagingParahippocampal gyrusCognitive psychologyBrain and Language
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