Background: Addiction research has hypothesised that automatic and reflective cognitive processes play an important role in the onset and maintenance of alcohol (ab)use, wherein automatic reactions to drug-related cues steer the drug user towards consuming before reflective processes can get over and steer towards a different behavioural response. These automatic processes include the tendency to attend and approach alcohol cues. These biases may be trained away from alcohol via computerised cognitive bias modification (CBM). The present protocol describes the design of a double-blind randomised controlled trial (RCT) testing the effectiveness of attentional bias and approach bias re-training with a 2×2 factorial design, alongside a brief m...
Background: According to contemporary neurocognitive models, addiction is maintained by the biasing ...
A new training to decrease attentional bias (attentional bias modification training, ABM) was tested...
Item does not contain fulltextThis study tested the effects of a new cognitive-bias modification (CB...
Background Addiction research has hypothesised that automatic and reflective cognitive processes pl...
Background: Addiction research has hypothesised that automatic and reflective cognitive processes pl...
BACKGROUND: Relapse is common in alcohol-dependent individuals and can be triggered by alcohol-relat...
BACKGROUND: People with alcohol use disorders often exhibit an "alcohol approach bias", the automati...
Background: Alcoholism is a progressive neurocognitive developmental disorder. Recent evidence shows...
Item does not contain fulltextObjective: Alcohol-dependent patients show attentional and approach bi...
BACKGROUND: Recent theoretical models emphasize the role of impulsive processes in alcohol addiction...
ABSTRACTBackgroundAlcoholism is a progressive neurocognitive developmental disorder. Recent evidence...
Background: Recent theoretical models emphasize the role of impulsive processes in alcohol addiction...
Contains fulltext : 139802.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Background Co...
Background: Recent theoretical models emphasize the role of impulsive processes in alcohol addiction...
BACKGROUND: According to contemporary neurocognitive models, addiction is maintained by the biasing ...
Background: According to contemporary neurocognitive models, addiction is maintained by the biasing ...
A new training to decrease attentional bias (attentional bias modification training, ABM) was tested...
Item does not contain fulltextThis study tested the effects of a new cognitive-bias modification (CB...
Background Addiction research has hypothesised that automatic and reflective cognitive processes pl...
Background: Addiction research has hypothesised that automatic and reflective cognitive processes pl...
BACKGROUND: Relapse is common in alcohol-dependent individuals and can be triggered by alcohol-relat...
BACKGROUND: People with alcohol use disorders often exhibit an "alcohol approach bias", the automati...
Background: Alcoholism is a progressive neurocognitive developmental disorder. Recent evidence shows...
Item does not contain fulltextObjective: Alcohol-dependent patients show attentional and approach bi...
BACKGROUND: Recent theoretical models emphasize the role of impulsive processes in alcohol addiction...
ABSTRACTBackgroundAlcoholism is a progressive neurocognitive developmental disorder. Recent evidence...
Background: Recent theoretical models emphasize the role of impulsive processes in alcohol addiction...
Contains fulltext : 139802.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Background Co...
Background: Recent theoretical models emphasize the role of impulsive processes in alcohol addiction...
BACKGROUND: According to contemporary neurocognitive models, addiction is maintained by the biasing ...
Background: According to contemporary neurocognitive models, addiction is maintained by the biasing ...
A new training to decrease attentional bias (attentional bias modification training, ABM) was tested...
Item does not contain fulltextThis study tested the effects of a new cognitive-bias modification (CB...