Citation: Jp. Forsyth et Mm. Kelly, A tale of three blind men on the proper subject matter of clinical scienceand practice: Commentary on Plaud's behaviorism vs. Ilardi and Feldman's cognitive neuroscience, J CLIN PSYC, 57(9), 2001, pp. 1133-1148
Citation: Jp. Forsyth et al., Response primacy in fear conditioning: Disentangling the contributions of UCS vs. UCR intensity, PSYCHOL REC, 50(1), 2000, pp. 17-33
Citation: Jp. Forsyth et al., Evoking analogue subtypes of panic attacks in a nonclinical population using carbon dioxide-enriched air, BEHAV RES T, 38(6), 2000, pp. 559-572
Citation: Mj. Zvolensky et al., Assessing the perceived predictability of anxiety-related events: a reporton the perceived predictability index, J BEHAV EXP, 31(3-4), 2000, pp. 201-218
Citation: Jp. Forsyth et al., Anxiogenic effects of repeated administrations of 20% CO2-enriched air: stability within sessions and habituation across time, J BEHAV EXP, 31(2), 2000, pp. 103-121
Citation: Jp. Forsyth, A process-oriented behavioral approach to the etiology, maintenance, and treatment of anxiety-related disorders, CLINICAL BEHAVIOR ANALYSIS, 2000, pp. 153-180
Citation: Jp. Forsyth et al., The absence of relation between anxiety sensitivity and fear conditioning using 20% versus 13% CO2-enriched air as unconditioned stimuli, BEHAV RES T, 37(2), 1999, pp. 143-153
Authors:
Forsyth, JP
Kollins, S
Palav, A
Duff, K
Maher, S
Citation: Jp. Forsyth et al., Has behavior therapy drifted from its experimental roots? A survey of publication trends in mainstream behavioral journals, J BEHAV EXP, 30(3), 1999, pp. 205-220
Citation: Gh. Eifert et al., Moving from the laboratory to the real world and back again: Increasing the relevance of laboratory examinations of anxiety sensitivity, BEHAV THER, 30(2), 1999, pp. 273-283