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  1. May 1, 2015 · Dependent upon the level of threat, this model suggests different cognitive coping strategies — thought suppression or attentional avoidance. As demonstrated by Langens and Mörth (2003) , repressive coping in response to threatening stimuli is characterised by lines (a) and (c) in this model (i.e. attentional avoidance for low threat intrusions, thought suppression for high threat intrusions).

    • Antony C. Moss, James A.K. Erskine, Ian P. Albery, James Richard Allen, George J. Georgiou
    • 2015
  2. Repression is associated in the literature with terms such as non-expression, emotional control, rationality, anti-emotionality, defensiveness and restraint. Whether these terms are synonymous with repression, indicate a variation, or are essentially different from repression is uncertain. To clarify this obscured view on repression, this paper ...

  3. Abstract. Over a century ago, Freud proposed that memories can be forgotten by pushing them into the unconscious, a process called repression. The existence of repression has remained controversial for more than a century, in part because of its strong coupling with trauma and the ethical and practical difficulties of studying this process in ...

    • Michael C. Anderson
    • 2006
  4. The 2015 Science of Change meeting bridged the fields of neuroscience and psychotherapy research to identify brain mechanisms of behavior change that are “common” across therapies, and “specific” to distinct behavioral interventions. Conceptual models of brain mechanisms underlying effects of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, mindfulness ...

    • Tammy Chung, Antonio Noronha, Kathleen M. Carroll, Marc N. Potenza, Kent Hutchison, Vince D. Calhoun...
    • 10.1007/s40429-016-0113-z
    • 2016
    • 2016/09
  5. Research to understand how individuals cope with intrusive negative or threatening thoughts suggests a variety of different cognitive strategies aimed at thought control. In this review, two of these strategies--thought suppression and repressive coping--are discussed in the context of addictive beh …

    • Antony C. Moss, James A.K. Erskine, Ian P. Albery, James Richard Allen, George J. Georgiou
    • 2015
  6. Apr 25, 2018 · Addiction, the most severe form of substance use disorder, is a chronic brain disorder molded by strong biosocial factors that has devastating consequences to individuals and to society. Our understanding of substance use disorder has advanced significantly over the last 3 decades in part due to major progress in genetics and neuroscience research and to the development of new technologies ...

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  8. Abstract. Fundamental to cognitive models of addiction is the gradual strengthening of automatic, urge-related responding that develops in tandem with the diminution of self-control-related processes aimed at inhibiting impulses. Recent conceptualizations of addiction also include a third set of cognitive processes related to self-awareness and ...