Cognitive models of insomnia suggest that selective attention may be involved in maintaining the disorder. However, direct assessment of selective attention is limited. Using the inducing change blindness (ICB) paradigm we aimed to determine whether there is attentional preference for sleep-related stimuli in psychophysiological insomnia (PI) relative to delayed sleep phase syndrome (DSPS) and good sleepers (GS). In the ICB task, a visual scene, comprising both sleep-related and neutral stimuli, flickers back and forth with one element (sleep or neutral) of the scene changing between presentations. Therefore, a 2 • 3 totally between-participants design was employed. The dependent variable was the number of flickers it took...
STUDY OBJECTIVES:To date, evidence of an attentional bias in insomnia has mostly been obtained throu...
Attentional bias to sleep related stimuli by poor sleepers has been reported as a factor in initiati...
Cognitive models of insomnia highlight internal and external cognitive-biases for sleep-related “thr...
Cognitive models of insomnia suggest that selective attention may be involved in maintaining the dis...
Cognitive models of insomnia suggest that selective attention may be involved in maintaining the dis...
STUDY OBJECTIVES: Cognitive models of primary insomnia (PI) suggest attention bias as a maintaining ...
Evidence was sought of an attentional bias toward a highly representative object of the bedroom envi...
Prominent cognitive models of insomnia have emphasized the notion that the disorder is in part maint...
Prominent models of insomnia posit that sleep-related attentional bias plays an important role in th...
Espie and colleagues [(2006). The attention-intention-effort pathway in the development of psychophy...
People with insomnia often display an attentional bias for sleep-specific stimuli. However, prior st...
Sleep-related attentional bias has been proposed to be an important factor in the development and ma...
Sleep-related attentional bias has been proposed to be an important factor in the development and ma...
Attention biases to sleep-related stimuli are held to play a key role in the development and mainten...
STUDY OBJECTIVES: To date, cognitive probe paradigms have been used in different guises to obtain re...
STUDY OBJECTIVES:To date, evidence of an attentional bias in insomnia has mostly been obtained throu...
Attentional bias to sleep related stimuli by poor sleepers has been reported as a factor in initiati...
Cognitive models of insomnia highlight internal and external cognitive-biases for sleep-related “thr...
Cognitive models of insomnia suggest that selective attention may be involved in maintaining the dis...
Cognitive models of insomnia suggest that selective attention may be involved in maintaining the dis...
STUDY OBJECTIVES: Cognitive models of primary insomnia (PI) suggest attention bias as a maintaining ...
Evidence was sought of an attentional bias toward a highly representative object of the bedroom envi...
Prominent cognitive models of insomnia have emphasized the notion that the disorder is in part maint...
Prominent models of insomnia posit that sleep-related attentional bias plays an important role in th...
Espie and colleagues [(2006). The attention-intention-effort pathway in the development of psychophy...
People with insomnia often display an attentional bias for sleep-specific stimuli. However, prior st...
Sleep-related attentional bias has been proposed to be an important factor in the development and ma...
Sleep-related attentional bias has been proposed to be an important factor in the development and ma...
Attention biases to sleep-related stimuli are held to play a key role in the development and mainten...
STUDY OBJECTIVES: To date, cognitive probe paradigms have been used in different guises to obtain re...
STUDY OBJECTIVES:To date, evidence of an attentional bias in insomnia has mostly been obtained throu...
Attentional bias to sleep related stimuli by poor sleepers has been reported as a factor in initiati...
Cognitive models of insomnia highlight internal and external cognitive-biases for sleep-related “thr...