Repression, Psychology
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Subject Areas on Research
- A comparison of normal forgetting, psychopathology, and information-processing models of reported amnesia for recent sexual trauma.
- A mediational model of trait negative affectivity, dispositional thought suppression, and intrusive thoughts following laboratory stressors.
- An analogue investigation of the relationships among perceived parental criticism, negative affect, and borderline personality disorder features: the role of thought suppression.
- Autobiographical memory specificity in child sexual abuse victims.
- Cortical Overlap and Cortical-Hippocampal Interactions Predict Subsequent True and False Memory.
- Does test-induced priming play a role in the creation of false memories?
- Emotional intensity predicts autobiographical memory experience.
- Evoking false beliefs about autobiographical experience.
- False memory across languages: implicit associative response vs fuzzy trace views.
- Memorial consequences of testing school-aged children.
- Mindfulness and acceptance are associated with exercise maintenance in YMCA exercisers.
- Neural repetition suppression reflects fulfilled perceptual expectations.
- Opposing influences of emotional and non-emotional distracters upon sustained prefrontal cortex activity during a delayed-response working memory task.
- People believe it is plausible to have forgotten memories of childhood sexual abuse.
- People who expect to enter psychotherapy are prone to believing that they have forgotten memories of childhood trauma and abuse.
- Repressive coping style: relationships with depression, pain, and pain coping strategies in lung cancer outpatients.
- Test-induced priming of false memories.
- The Cognitive Escape Scale: measuring HIV-related thought avoidance.
- The accumulative effect of trauma exposure on short-term and delayed verbal memory in a treatment-seeking sample of female rape victims.
- The effects of sexual assault-related intrusion suppression in the laboratory and natural environment.
- The role of language in the development of false belief understanding: a training study.
- Twins Dispute Memory Ownership: A New False Memory Phenomenon