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Featured researches published by K. Nolet.


virtual reality international conference | 2014

Virtual reality applications in forensic psychiatry

M. Benbouriche; K. Nolet; Dominique Trottier; Patrice Renaud

Violent offending behaviours remain an important issue in particular when associated with mental illness. To prevent recidivism and protect society, investments are required to develop new tools that would provide decision makers with a better understanding of violent behaviours and ultimately improve treatment options for violent offenders. Recently, Virtual Reality (VR) is gaining recognition as promising tool in forensic psychiatry. Amongst other things, VR allows a renewal from both methodological and theoretical points of view. The aim of this paper is to introduce VR applications in the context of forensic psychiatry. After a brief introduction to the purpose of forensic psychiatry, examples will be given in order to illustrate how VR can help address some of the fields current issues.


Journal of Sex Research | 2016

How Ego Depletion Affects Sexual Self-Regulation: Is It More Than Resource Depletion?

K. Nolet; Joanne-Lucine Rouleau; M. Benbouriche; Fannie Carrier Emond; Patrice Renaud

Rational thinking and decision making are impacted when in a state of sexual arousal. The inability to self-regulate arousal can be linked to numerous problems, like sexual risk taking, infidelity, and sexual coercion. Studies have shown that most men are able to exert voluntary control over their sexual excitation with various levels of success. Both situational and dispositional factors can influence self-regulation achievement. The goal of this research was to investigate how ego depletion, a state of low self-control capacity, interacts with personality traits—propensities for sexual excitation and inhibition—and cognitive absorption, to cause sexual self-regulation failure. The sexual responses of 36 heterosexual males were assessed using penile plethysmography. They were asked to control their sexual arousal in two conditions, with and without ego depletion. Results suggest that ego depletion has opposite effects based on the trait sexual inhibition, as individuals moderately inhibited showed an increase in performance while highly inhibited ones showed a decrease. These results challenge the limited resource model of self-regulation and point to the importance of considering how people adapt to acute and high challenging conditions.


Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking | 2014

Sexual self-regulation and cognitive absorption as factors of sexual response toward virtual characters.

Patrice Renaud; Dominique Trottier; K. Nolet; Joanne L. Rouleau; Mathieu Goyette; Stéphane Bouchard

The eye movements and penile responses of 20 male participants were recorded while they were immersed with virtual sexual stimuli. These participants were divided into two groups according to their capacity to focus their attention in immersion (high and low focus). In order to understand sexual self-regulation better, we subjected participants to three experimental conditions: (a) immersion with a preferred sexual stimulus, without sexual inhibition; (b) immersion with a preferred sexual stimulus, with sexual inhibition; and (c) immersion with a neutral stimulus. A significant difference was observed between the effects of each condition on erectile response and scanpath. The groups differed on self-regulation of their erectile responses and on their scanpath patterns. High focus participants had more difficulties than low focus participants with inhibiting their sexual responses and displayed less scattered eye movement trajectories over the critical areas of the virtual sexual stimuli. Results are interpreted in terms of sexual self-regulation and cognitive absorption in virtual immersion. In addition, the use of validated virtual sexual stimuli is presented as a methodological improvement over static and moving pictures, since it paves the way for the study of the role of social interaction in an ecologically valid and well-controlled way.


Archives of Sexual Behavior | 2018

What Money Can’t Buy: Different Patterns in Decision Making About Sex and Money Predict Past Sexual Coercion Perpetration

Fannie Carrier Emond; Jean Gagnon; K. Nolet; Gaëlle Cyr; Joanne-Lucine Rouleau

Self-reported impulsivity has been found to predict the perpetration of sexual coercion in both sexual offenders and male college students. Impulsivity can be conceptualized as a generalized lack of self-control (i.e., general perspective) or as a multifaceted construct that can vary from one context to the other (i.e., domain-specific perspective). Delay discounting, the tendency to prefer sooner smaller rewards over larger delayed rewards, is a measure of impulsive decision making. Recent sexual adaptations of delay discounting tasks can be used to test domain-specific assumptions. The present study used the UPPS-P impulsivity questionnaire, a standard money discounting task, and a sexual discounting task to predict past use of sexual coercion in a sample of 98 male college students. Results indicated that higher negative urgency scores, less impulsive money discounting, and more impulsive sexual discounting all predicted sexual coercion. Consistent with previous studies, sexuality was discounted more steeply than money by both perpetrators and non-perpetrators of sexual coercion, but this difference was twice as large in perpetrators compared to non-perpetrators. Our study identified three different predictors of sexual coercion in male college students: a broad tendency to act rashly under negative emotions, a specific difficulty to postpone sexual gratification, and a pattern of optimal non-sexual decision making. Results highlight the importance of using multiple measures, including sexuality-specific measures, to get a clear portrait of the links between impulsivity and sexual coercion.


Sexologies | 2016

Sexual impulsivity and problematic sexual behaviors in adults: Towards innovative domain-specific behavioral measures

F. Carrier Emond; K. Nolet; G. Cyr; Joanne-Lucine Rouleau; Jean Gagnon


Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality | 2014

A pilot development of virtual stimuli depicting affective dispositions for penile plethysmography assessment of sex offenders

Elissa Dennis; Joanne-Lucine Rouleau; Patrice Renaud; K. Nolet; Chantal Saumur


Sexologies | 2018

Insecure attachment and use of sexual coercion in male university students: Negative urgency as an explanatory mechanism

G. Cyr; F. Carrier Emond; K. Nolet; Jean Gagnon; Joanne-Lucine Rouleau


Sexologies | 2016

L’impulsivité sexuelle et les comportements sexuels problématiques chez les adultes : vers des mesures comportementales spécifiques et innovatrices☆

F. Carrier Emond; K. Nolet; G. Cyr; Joanne-Lucine Rouleau; Jean Gagnon


Sexologies | 2018

Attachement insécurisant et utilisation de coercition sexuelle chez les hommes étudiant à l’université : l’urgence négative comme mécanisme explicatif

G. Cyr; F. Carrier Emond; K. Nolet; Jean Gagnon; Joanne-Lucine Rouleau


Sexologies | 2017

Le modèle du double contrôle dans la compréhension des comportements sexuels problématiques chez les hommes

K. Nolet; A. Larouche Wilson; Joanne-Lucine Rouleau

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Jean Gagnon

Université de Montréal

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G. Cyr

Université de Montréal

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Patrice Renaud

Institut Philippe Pinel de Montréal

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M. Benbouriche

Université de Montréal

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Chantal Saumur

Institut Philippe Pinel de Montréal

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