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  1.  24
    The mirror effect: Self-awareness alone increases suicide thought accessibility.Leila Selimbegović & Armand Chatard - 2013 - Consciousness and Cognition 22 (3):756-764.
    According to objective self-awareness theory, when individuals are in a state of self-awareness, they tend to compare themselves to their standards. Self-to-standard comparison often yields unfavorable results and can be assimilated to a failure, activating an escape motivation. Building on recent research on the link between failure and suicide thought accessibility, the present experiment tested the hypothesis that mirror exposure alone provokes an increase in suicide thought accessibility. Participants were exposed to their mirror reflection while completing a lexical decision task (...)
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  2.  3
    (Eye-)tracking the escape from the self: guilt proneness moderates the effect of failure on self-avoidance.Jean Monéger, Armand Chatard & Leila Selimbegović - 2022 - Cognition and Emotion 36 (7):1374-1388.
    Failure increases the motivation to escape self-awareness. To date, however, the role of self-conscious emotions (shame and guilt) in triggering escape responses after failure has not been sufficiently addressed. In this pre-registered study (N = 156 undergraduates), we adapted a classic paradigm (avoidance of one’s image in a mirror) to a modern eye-tracking technology to test the hypothesis that shame proneness moderates the effect of failure on self-awareness avoidance. Individual differences in guilt and shame proneness were assessed before priming thoughts (...)
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    Habitual Routines and Automatic Tendencies Differential Roles in Alcohol Misuse Among Undergraduates.Florent Wyckmans, Armand Chatard, Mélanie Saeremans, Charles Kornreich, Nemat Jaafari, Carole Fantini-Hauwel & Xavier Noël - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    There is a debate over whether actions that resist devaluation are primarily habit- or goal-directed. The incentive habit account of compulsive actions has received support from behavioral paradigms and brain imaging. In addition, the self-reported Creature of Habit Scale has been proposed to capture inter-individual differences in habitual tendencies. It is subdivided into two dimensions: routine and automaticity. We first considered a French version of this questionnaire for validation, based on a sample of 386 undergraduates. The relationship between two dimensions (...)
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