SPECIAL ISSUE: Full Correspondence, Biofeedback, and the Placebo Effect

The theory of full correspondence posits that all placebo-induced effects are accompanied by corresponding subjective experiences. It was first put forward as a means of explaining the nature of the placebo effect and of reconciling the leading approaches to the phenomenon in a single overarching th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biofeedback (Wheat Ridge, Colo.) Colo.), 2022-10, Vol.50 (3), p.61-67
Hauptverfasser: LeBlanc, André R., McClay, Patrick L.
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description The theory of full correspondence posits that all placebo-induced effects are accompanied by corresponding subjective experiences. It was first put forward as a means of explaining the nature of the placebo effect and of reconciling the leading approaches to the phenomenon in a single overarching theory. In this paper, we examine several points of contact between full correspondence and biofeedback research and consider some of their clinical and experimental implications.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Biofeedback
Classical conditioning
Drug dosages
Feedback
Medical research
Medicine
Physiology
Placebo effect
Placebos
Subjective experiences
title SPECIAL ISSUE: Full Correspondence, Biofeedback, and the Placebo Effect
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