Spider fearful individuals attend to threat, then quickly avoid it: evidence from eye movements.
According to cognitive models of anxiety, anxiety patients exhibit an early reflexive
attentional bias toward threat stimuli, which may be followed by intentional avoidance of …
attentional bias toward threat stimuli, which may be followed by intentional avoidance of …
Spider fearful individuals attend to threat, then quickly avoid it: Evidence from eye movements.
M Rinck, ES Becker - Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 2006 - psycnet.apa.org
According to cognitive models of anxiety, anxiety patients exhibit an early reflexive
attentional bias toward threat stimuli, which may be followed by intentional avoidance of …
attentional bias toward threat stimuli, which may be followed by intentional avoidance of …
Spider fearful individuals attend to threat, then quickly avoid it: Evidence from eye movements.
M Rinck, ES Becker - Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 2006 - search.pdh.ebscohost.com
According to cognitive models of anxiety, anxiety patients exhibit an early reflexive
attentional bias toward threat stimuli, which may be followed by intentional avoidance of …
attentional bias toward threat stimuli, which may be followed by intentional avoidance of …
Spider Fearful Individuals Attend to Threat, Then Quickly Avoid It: Evidence From Eye Movements
M Rinck, ES Becker - Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 2006 - search.proquest.com
According to cognitive models of anxiety, anxiety patients exhibit an early reflexive
attentional bias toward threat stimuli, which may be followed by intentional avoidance of …
attentional bias toward threat stimuli, which may be followed by intentional avoidance of …
[引用][C] Spider fearful individuals attend to threat, then quickly avoid it: Evidence from eye movements
M RINCK - Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 2006 - cir.nii.ac.jp
Spider fearful individuals attend to threat, then quickly avoid it : Evidence from eye
movements | CiNii Research CiNii 国立情報学研究所 学術情報ナビゲ恁縖サイニィ] 詳細へ移動 …
movements | CiNii Research CiNii 国立情報学研究所 学術情報ナビゲ恁縖サイニィ] 詳細へ移動 …
Spider fearful individuals attend to threat, then quickly avoid it: evidence from eye movements
M Rinck, ES Becker - Journal of abnormal psychology, 2006 - pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
According to cognitive models of anxiety, anxiety patients exhibit an early reflexive
attentional bias toward threat stimuli, which may be followed by intentional avoidance of …
attentional bias toward threat stimuli, which may be followed by intentional avoidance of …
[引用][C] Spider fearful individuals attend to threat, then quickly avoid it: Evidence from eye movements
M RINCK, ES BECKER - Journal of abnormal psychology …, 2006 - pascal-francis.inist.fr
Spider fearful individuals attend to threat, then quickly avoid it : Evidence from eye
movements CNRS Inist Pascal-Francis CNRS Pascal and Francis Bibliographic Databases …
movements CNRS Inist Pascal-Francis CNRS Pascal and Francis Bibliographic Databases …
[引用][C] Spider fearful individuals attend to threat, then quickly avoid it: Evidence from eye movements
M Rinck, ES Becker - 2006 - repository.ubn.ru.nl
According to cognitive models of anxiety, anxiety patients exhibit an early reflexive
attentional bias toward threat stimuli, which may be followed by intentional avoidance of …
attentional bias toward threat stimuli, which may be followed by intentional avoidance of …
Spider fearful individuals attend to threat, then quickly avoid it: evidence from eye movements.
M Rinck, ES Becker - Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 2006 - europepmc.org
According to cognitive models of anxiety, anxiety patients exhibit an early reflexive
attentional bias toward threat stimuli, which may be followed by intentional avoidance of …
attentional bias toward threat stimuli, which may be followed by intentional avoidance of …