Search Results - "Volders, Stéphanie"
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The use of safety-seeking behavior in exposure-based treatments for fear and anxiety: Benefit or burden? A meta-analytic review
Published in Clinical psychology review (01-04-2016)“…There is a longstanding debate whether allowing safety-seeking behaviors (SSBs) during cognitive-behavioral treatment hampers or facilitates the reduction of…”
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Safety behavior can hamper the extinction of fear of movement-related pain: An experimental investigation in healthy participants
Published in Behaviour research and therapy (01-11-2012)“…Excessive fear of movement-related pain (FMRP), and its associated avoidance behavior, is considered a major risk factor for disability in chronic…”
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Relationship between different measures of pain-related fear and physical capacity of the spine in patients with chronic low back pain
Published in The spine journal (01-09-2013)“…Abstract Background context It has been controversially stated that pain-related fear is a more important determining factor for disability in chronic low back…”
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Avoidance behavior in chronic pain research: A cold case revisited
Published in Behaviour research and therapy (01-01-2015)“…In chronic musculoskeletal pain, avoidance behavior is a prominent behavioral characteristic that can manifest itself in various ways. It is also considered a…”
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The Reduction of Fear of Movement-related Pain: Does Motivational Context Matter?
Published in The Clinical journal of pain (01-11-2015)“…OBJECTIVES:Previous research indicates that reducing fear of movement-related pain is hampered by engaging in safety-seeking behavior. We tested the hypothesis…”
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Fear reduction in patients with chronic pain: a learning theory perspective
Published in Expert review of neurotherapeutics (01-11-2010)“…Acute pain informs the individual that there is an imminent threat of body damage, and is associated with the urge to escape and avoid. Fear learning takes…”
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Sub-optimal presentation of painful facial expressions enhances readiness for action and pain perception following electrocutaneous stimulation
Published in Frontiers in psychology (2015)“…Observation of others' painful facial expressions has been shown to facilitate behavioral response tendencies and to increase pain perception in the observer…”
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