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  1. Attentional Biases for Facial Expressions in Social Phobia: The Face-in-the-Crowd Paradigm.Eva Gilboa-Schechtman, Edna B. Foa & Nader Amir - 1999 - Cognition and Emotion 13 (3):305-318.
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  • Association of the Jumping to Conclusions and Evidence Integration Biases With Delusions in Psychosis: A Detailed Meta-analysis.Benjamin McLean, Mattiske F., K. Julie & Ryan P. Balzan - 2017 - Schizophrenia Bulletin 43 (2):344–354.
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  • Early information processing biases in social anxiety.Vladimir Miskovic & Louis A. Schmidt - 2012 - Cognition and Emotion 26 (1):176-185.
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  • Hopping, skipping or jumping to conclusions? Clarifying the role of the JTC bias in delusions.Cordelia Fine, Mark Gardner, Jillian Craigie & Ian Gold - 2007 - Cogn Neuropsychiatry 12 (1):46-77.
    Introduction. There is substantial evidence that patients with delusions exhibit a reasoning bias—known as the “jumping to conclusions” bias—which leads them to accept hypotheses as correct on the basis of less evidence than controls. We address three questions concerning the JTC bias that require clarification. Firstly, what is the best measure of the JTC bias? Second, is the JTC bias correlated specifically with delusions, or only with the symptomatology of schizophrenia? And third, is the bias enhanced by emotionally salient material? (...)
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