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Pain Attenuation through Mindfulness is Associated with Decreased Cognitive Control and Increased Sensory Processing in the Brain Tim Gard1,2, Britta K. Holzel1,2, Alexander T. Sack3, Hannes Hempel2, Sara W. Lazar1, Dieter Vaitl2,4 and Ulrich Ott2,4
A Systematic Review of Psychological Factors as Predictors of Chronicity/Disability in Prospective Cohorts of Low Back Pain Tamar Pincus, PhD,* A. Kim Burton, PhD,† Steve Vogel, DO,‡ Andy P. Field, PhD§
Pain Attenuation through Mindfulness is Associated with Decreased Cognitive Control and Increased Sensory Processing in the Brain Tim Gard1,2, Britta K. Holzel1,2, Alexander T. Sack3, Hannes Hempel2, Sara W. Lazar1, Dieter Vaitl2,4 and Ulrich Ott2,
Pain and Emotion: A Biopsychosocial Review of Recent Research Mark A. Lumley,1 Jay L. Cohen,1 George S. Borszcz,1 Annmarie Cano,1 Alison M. Radcliffe,1 Laura S. Porter,2 Howard Schubiner,3 and Francis J. Keefe2