Threat Matrix
Cross-source consensus on Threat Matrix from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
How it works
Benefits
Preparation
Other
Highlighted claims
- Salience refers to input that is novel, different, or meaningful enough to change self-representation. — Non-Threatening Pain Education
- Threat reduction is organized as redirecting attention, rebuilding strategies and motor programs, then progressing to function and participation. — Non-Threatening Pain Education
- The threat matrix frames the brain as a super-system that selects outputs to help survival or combat perceived threat. — Non-Threatening Pain Education
- A novel but non-threatening stimulus can redirect attention from threat and support new strategies. — Non-Threatening Pain Education
- Unfamiliar therapeutic inputs can produce strong changes because they are salient. — Non-Threatening Pain Education
- Novelty and contrast may matter more than stimulus intensity in threat processing. — Non-Threatening Pain Education