Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 78
pro vyhledávání: '"L. Charles Ward"'
Autor:
Dawn M. Ehde, Alexandra Ferreira-Valente, Melissa A. Day, Michelle P. Grover, Beverly E. Thorn, L. Charles Ward, Jason B. Mattingley, Mark P. Jensen
Publikováno v:
Mindfulness. 12:923-935
This research examined whether brief sessions of mindfulness meditation (MM) or self-hypnosis (HYP) produce changes in cold pressor task (CPT) outcomes and whether outcome improvement, when it occurs, is mediated by attentional processes (i.e., pain
Publikováno v:
European journal of pain (London, England)REFERENCES. 26(2)
Background: The behavioural inhibition system and activation system (BIS-BAS) model of pain focusses on two clusters of responses to pain—escape/avoidance (BIS) and approach (BAS) behaviours. While the BIS-BAS model emphasizes active responses to p
Autor:
Beverly E. Thorn, Melissa A. Day, Dawn M. Ehde, Amanda J. Barnier, Jason B. Mattingley, L. Charles Ward, Mark P. Jensen, John R. Burns
Publikováno v:
The Clinical journal of pain. 36(10)
OBJECTIVES: This study evaluated theoretically derived mechanisms and common therapeutic factors to test their role in accounting for pain-related outcome change during group-delivered cognitive therapy, mindfulness meditation, and mindfulness-based
Publikováno v:
The Clinical Journal of Pain. 34:723-731
The Pain-related Cognitive Processes Questionnaire (PCPQ) provides a multifaceted assessment of different styles of pain-related attentional processing. The present study examined the construct validity of the 4 PCPQ composite scales.Exploratory stru
Publikováno v:
The Clinical Journal of Pain. 33:325-334
Objectives: We recently proposed a Behavioral Inhibition System-Behavioral Activation System (BIS-BAS) model to help explain the effects of pain treatments. In this model, treatments are hypothesized to operate primarily through their effects on the
Autor:
Cathryne P. Lang, Melissa A. Day, Dawn M. Ehde, Beverly E. Thorn, L. Charles Ward, Toby Newton-John, Mark P. Jensen
Publikováno v:
Pain Medicine. 19:269-283
Objective Cognitive processes may be characterized as how individuals think, whereas cognitive content constitutes what individuals think. Both cognitive processes and cognitive content are theorized to play important roles in chronic pain adjustment
Autor:
Mark P. Jensen, Melissa A. Day, Michelle P. Grover, Oliver R. Illingworth, L. Charles Ward, Dawn M. Ehde
Publikováno v:
European journal of pain (London, England)REFERENCES. 24(6)
Background: This study reports a multivariate test of sex and race differences in experimental pain, and the degree to which these differences could be uniquely attributable to three levels of cognition: primary appraisals (threat, challenge), second
Autor:
Mark P. Jensen, Melissa A. Day, Dawn M. Ehde, John W. Burns, Jason B. Mattingley, L. Charles Ward, Beverly E. Thorn, Amanda J. Barnier
Publikováno v:
Pain medicine (Malden, Mass.). 20(11)
ObjectiveThis pilot trial compared the feasibility, tolerability, acceptability, and effects of group-delivered mindfulness meditation (MM), cognitive therapy (CT), and mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) for chronic low back pain (CLBP).Setti
Publikováno v:
The Clinical Journal of Pain. 31:222-228
OBJECTIVE: Mindfulness and pain catastrophizing are important constructs in pain research, and there are theoretical reasons for suspecting that measures of the 2 constructs should be related in predictable ways. The present study investigated the as
Autor:
Melissa A. Day, Beverly E. Thorn, Forrest Scogin, Gary R. Kilgo, Steven D. Hickman, L. Charles Ward, Nancy J. Rubin
Publikováno v:
The Clinical Journal of Pain. 30:152-161
This pilot study reports the findings of a randomized controlled trial (RCT) investigating the feasibility, tolerability, acceptability, and initial estimates of efficacy of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) compared to a delayed treatment (