Covariation bias can be defined as phobic subjects' tendency to overestimate the association between phobic stimuli and aversive outcomes. The current study presents two experiments that examined this type of cognitive bias in children aged 8-13 years (N = 147 in Experiment 1, N = 240 in Experiment 2). Children completed a self-report questionnaire for measuring spider fear and then participated in a card game in which fear-relevant (i.e., spider) and fear-irrelevant (i.e., weapon and Pokemon) pictures were equally paired with negative and positive outcomes (respectively losing and winning candy). No evidence was found for a relationship between children's level of spider fear and the tendency to link negative consequences to fear-relevant ...
This study examined whether the cognitive bias for threat is a stable phenomenon in 20 spider phobic...
Contains fulltext : 99527.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Fear in children...
There is increasing evidence that spiders are not feared because of harmful outcome expectancies but...
Covariation bias can be defined as phobic subjects' tendency to overestimate the association between...
Covariation bias can be defined as phobic subjects' tendency to overestimate the association between...
Background and Objectives: Cognitive theories suggest that cognitive biases may be related and toget...
Item does not contain fulltextBackground and Objectives: Cognitive theories suggest that cognitive b...
Background and objectives: Several information-processing models highlight the independent roles of ...
Aimed to clarify whether nonclinical fear of spiders in children is related to a distorted cognitive...
This study investigated multiple cognitive biases in children simultaneously, to investigate whether...
Examined the relation between spider fear in children and cognitive processing bias toward threateni...
The present study was designed to test the conditions under which threat-related cognitive bias can ...
Item does not contain fulltextThis study investigated whether direct and indirect measures predict u...
Twenty treated and 18 untreated spider phobics were exposed to a series of 72 slides. Three differen...
There is now considerable evidence that a person's cognitive processing is influenced by emotional f...
This study examined whether the cognitive bias for threat is a stable phenomenon in 20 spider phobic...
Contains fulltext : 99527.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Fear in children...
There is increasing evidence that spiders are not feared because of harmful outcome expectancies but...
Covariation bias can be defined as phobic subjects' tendency to overestimate the association between...
Covariation bias can be defined as phobic subjects' tendency to overestimate the association between...
Background and Objectives: Cognitive theories suggest that cognitive biases may be related and toget...
Item does not contain fulltextBackground and Objectives: Cognitive theories suggest that cognitive b...
Background and objectives: Several information-processing models highlight the independent roles of ...
Aimed to clarify whether nonclinical fear of spiders in children is related to a distorted cognitive...
This study investigated multiple cognitive biases in children simultaneously, to investigate whether...
Examined the relation between spider fear in children and cognitive processing bias toward threateni...
The present study was designed to test the conditions under which threat-related cognitive bias can ...
Item does not contain fulltextThis study investigated whether direct and indirect measures predict u...
Twenty treated and 18 untreated spider phobics were exposed to a series of 72 slides. Three differen...
There is now considerable evidence that a person's cognitive processing is influenced by emotional f...
This study examined whether the cognitive bias for threat is a stable phenomenon in 20 spider phobic...
Contains fulltext : 99527.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Fear in children...
There is increasing evidence that spiders are not feared because of harmful outcome expectancies but...