1Turk D C & Rud T E. Cognitive factors and persistent pain A glimpse into Pandot's box.cognitive Therapy and Research, 1992, 16, 99-122.
2Gatchel R J, & Turk D C.psychological Approaches to pain management : A practitioner' s handbook, New york:guilford Press. 1996.
3Eccleston C, Crombez G. Pain demands attention: A cognitive - affecfive model of the interruptive function of pain. Psychological Bulletin, 1999, 125, 356-366.
4Dalgleish T, Power M J (Eds) . Handbook of cognition and emotion. Chichester, England : Wiley. 1999.
5Williams J M G, Mathews A, Maclcod C. The emotional Stroop task and psychopathology. Psychological bulletin, 1996,120, 3- 24.
6Macleod C, Mathews A, Tata P. Attentional bias in emotional disorders. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1986, 95, 15 -20.
7Pincus T, Fraser L, & Pearce S.Do chronic pain patients Stroop on pain stimuli? British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1998, 37, 49- 58.
8Pincus T, Pearce S, McClelland A, et al. interpretative bias of ambiguous stimuli in chronic pain patients. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 1994, 38, 347 -353.
9Griffith J, Mclean M, & Pearce S A.Information processing across three chronic pain groups. In Abstracts of 8^th World Congress on Paln. Seattle, WA: International Association for the Study of Pain. 1996.
10Sandgren A K. Chronic pain self- schemas: The evidence for their existence and influence in the perception of others.Unpublished doctoral dlssemlfion,St. Lofts University, Missouri. 1989.
7Horwitz AV, White HR, Howell WS. The use of multiple outcomes in stress research : A case study of gender differences in responses to martial dissolution. Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 1996,37:278-291.