4 studies found in English from a total of 36841
Keywords
Go/No-Go training 
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Mechanisms of Change in a Go/No-Go Training Video Game (HitnRun) for Young Adult Smokers

H Scholten (Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University)
Smoking is a major cause of worldwide morbidity and mortality. There is no evidence-based intervention program available to help young adults quit smoking; identifying targets for intervention is critical. A candidate target is inhibitory control, with previous studies showing behavior change in the food and alcohol domain by applying Go/No-Go training paradigms. The current...
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Dataset belonging to "Mechanisms of Change in a Go/No-Go Training Game for Young Adult Smokers"

H. Scholten (Radboud University); M. Luijten (Radboud University); A. Poppelaars (Radboud University); (2 more)
Objective: Smoking is a major cause of worldwide morbidity and mortality. Evidence-based intervention programs to help young adults quit smoking are largely lacking; identifying targets for intervention is therefore critical. A candidate target is inhibitory control, with previous studies on Go/No-Go trainings showing behavior change in the food and alcohol domain. The...
Study description available in:EN
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How Does Not Responding to Appetitive Stimuli Cause Devaluation: Evaluative Conditioning or Response Inhibition?

Z. Chen (RU Radboud Universiteit); H.P. Veling (RU Radboud Universiteit); A.J. Dijksterhuis (RU Radboud Universiteit); (1 more)
In a series of 6 experiments, we examined how not responding to appetitive stimuli causes devaluation. To examine this question, a go/no-go task was employed in which appetitive stimuli were consistently associated with cues to respond (go stimuli), or with cues to not respond (either no-go cues or the absence of cues; no-go stimuli). Change in evaluation of go and no-go...
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Dataset belonging to "Do smokers devaluate smoking cues after go/nogo training?"

H. Scholten (Radboud University); I. Granic (Radboud University); Z. Chen (Radboud University); (2 more)
Objective: Smoking is one of the leading public health problems worldwide. The inability to quit smoking may be the result of the amplified value of smoking-related cues and inhibitory control deficits. Previous research has shown that pairing substance-related cues with no-go trials in go/no-go training reduces the value of these cues, an effect known as devaluation. The...
Study description available in:EN
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