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Preserved Inhibitory Control Deficits of Overweight Participants in a Gamified Stop-Signal Task: Exp...

Preserved Inhibitory Control Deficits of Overweight Participants in a Gamified Stop-Signal Task: Exp...

https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_ba1a5b9ab6b34ef4bdfda98ec2cdeb0b

Preserved Inhibitory Control Deficits of Overweight Participants in a Gamified Stop-Signal Task: Experimental Study of Validity

About this item

Full title

Preserved Inhibitory Control Deficits of Overweight Participants in a Gamified Stop-Signal Task: Experimental Study of Validity

Publisher

Canada: JMIR Publications

Journal title

JMIR serious games, 2021-03, Vol.9 (1), p.e25063-e25063

Language

English

Formats

Publication information

Publisher

Canada: JMIR Publications

More information

Scope and Contents

Contents

Gamification in mental health could increase training adherence, motivation, and transfer effects, but the external validity of gamified tasks is unclear. This study documents that gamified task variants can show preserved associations between markers of behavioral deficits and health-related variables. We draw on the inhibitory control deficit in...

Alternative Titles

Full title

Preserved Inhibitory Control Deficits of Overweight Participants in a Gamified Stop-Signal Task: Experimental Study of Validity

Authors, Artists and Contributors

Identifiers

Primary Identifiers

Record Identifier

TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_ba1a5b9ab6b34ef4bdfda98ec2cdeb0b

Permalink

https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_ba1a5b9ab6b34ef4bdfda98ec2cdeb0b

Other Identifiers

ISSN

2291-9279

E-ISSN

2291-9279

DOI

10.2196/25063

How to access this item