Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"OCD" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Obsessive-compulsive symptoms moderate the effect of contamination motion on disgust intensity Pelzer M; Ouellet-Courtois C; Krause S; Coughtrey A; Fink-Lamotte J; 40858003
CCRH
2 Reappraising beliefs about losing control: An experimental investigation Fridgen CPEA; Radomsky AS; 39837217
PSYCHOLOGY
3 Further analyses of appraisals of losing control and other OCD-related cognitions: A quasi-experimental investigation Sandstrom A; Radomsky AS; 39626976
PSYCHOLOGY
4 Development and psychometric evaluation of the Violation Appraisal Measure (VAM) Krause S; Radomsky AS; 39206950
PSYCHOLOGY
5 'Things that shouldn't be': a qualitative investigation of violation-related appraisals in individuals with OCD and/or trauma histories Krause S; Radomsky AS; 38679952
PSYCHOLOGY
6 What's control got to do with it? A systematic review of control beliefs in obsessive-compulsive disorder Sandstrom A; Krause S; Ouellet-Courtois C; Kelly-Turner K; Radomsky AS; 38091769
PSYCHOLOGY
7 Beliefs about losing control and other OCD-related cognitions: An experimental investigation Sandstrom A; Radomsky AS; 37948951
PSYCHOLOGY
8 The fear of losing control Adam S Radomsky 36113905
PSYCHOLOGY
9 "Was I asking for it?": An experimental investigation of perceived responsibility, mental contamination and workplace sexual harassment. Krause S, Radomsky AS 33321247
PSYCHOLOGY
10 The Covert and Overt Reassurance Seeking Inventory (CORSI): Development, validation and psychometric analyses. Radomsky AS, Neal RL, Parrish CL, Lavoie SL, Schell SE 33046164
CONCORDIA
11 Hoping for more: How cognitive science has and hasn't been helpful to the OCD clinician. Ouimet AJ, Ashbaugh AR, Radomsky AS 29673581
PSYCHOLOGY
12 Beliefs about losing control, obsessions, and caution: An experimental investigation. Gagné JP, Radomsky AS 32045733
PSYCHOLOGY
13 What do you really need? Self- and partner-reported intervention preferences within cognitive behavioural therapy for reassurance seeking behaviour. Neal RL, Radomsky AS 31495351
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Development and psychometric evaluation of the Violation Appraisal Measure (VAM)
Authors:Krause SRadomsky AS
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39206950/
DOI:10.1080/16506073.2024.2395823
Publication:Cognitive behaviour therapy
Keywords:AppraisalsOCDmental contaminationscale developmenttraumaviolation
PMID:39206950 Category: Date Added:2024-08-31
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Description:

Mental contamination refers to feelings of dirtiness and/or urges to wash that arise without direct contact with a contaminant. Cognitive models propose that this results from "serious, negative misappraisals of perceived violations". However, the specific violation misappraisals most relevant to mental contamination have yet to be established empirically, in part due to the lack of a comprehensive validated inventory of violation appraisals. Therefore, this study's aim was to develop and validate such a measure. Items for the new Violation Appraisal Measure (VAM) were developed from qualitative interviews, theoretical models, and previous empirical work. An Exploratory Factor Analysis was conducted in a sample of (n = 300) undergraduate participants, which revealed a four-factor structure: Responsibility/Self-Blame, Permanence, Mistrust, and Self-Worth. The VAM showed excellent internal consistency (α = 0.90), good convergent (r = .50 to .64) and adequate divergent (r = -.01 to .46) validity and was predictive of mental contamination symptoms over and above existing related appraisal measures, Δ F(1,289) = 29.35, p < .001, Δ R2 = 0.06. A Confirmatory Factor Analysis in a second sample of (n = 300) undergraduate students confirmed strong model fit for the four-factor structure of the VAM. The development of the VAM is an important contribution to the search for empirically based cognitive mechanisms in mental contamination and other violation-related sequelae.





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