Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"compulsive disorder" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 The prevalence and predictors of aggressive obsessions in obsessive-compulsive disorder: A meta-analytic review Fawcett EJ; Morris Q; Lahey C; Corran C; Krause S; Bishop OC; Rash JA; Carter J; Fawcett JM; 41650656
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Self-Ambivalence Is Indirectly Associated With Obsessive-Compulsive and Eating Disorder Symptoms Through Different Feared Self-Themes Wilson S; Mesli N; Mehak A; Racine SE; 40227164
PSYCHOLOGY
3 Putting things right: An experimental investigation of memory biases related to symmetry, ordering and arranging behaviour Radomsky AS; Ouellet-Courtois C; Golden E; Senn JM; Parrish CL; 37793286
PSYCHOLOGY
4 COVID-19 related stress and fears of contamination: the impact of feared self-perceptions Audet JS; Jacmin-Park S; Kheloui S; Gravel C; Juster RP; Aardema F; 37359678
PSYCHOLOGY
5 An Experimental Investigation of Moral Self-Violation and Mental Contamination Krause S; Radomsky AS; 37363745
PSYCHOLOGY
6 Can immorality be contracted? Appraisals of moral disgust and contamination fear Ouellet-Courtois C; Radomsky AS; 37270955
PSYCHOLOGY
7 Development and validation of the multidimensional version of the Fear of Self Questionnaire: Corrupted, culpable and malformed feared possible selves in obsessive-compulsive and body-dysmorphic symptoms. Aardema F, Radomsky AS, Moulding R, Wong SF, Bourguignon L, Giraldo-O'Meara M 33547834
PSYCHOLOGY
8 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
9 Hoping for more: How cognitive science has and hasn't been helpful to the OCD clinician. Ouimet AJ, Ashbaugh AR, Radomsky AS 29673581
PSYCHOLOGY
10 Manipulating visual perspective for obsessional imagery and its impact on obsessive-compulsive symptoms in an analogue sample. Wong SF, Hu DAP, Grisham JR 32361667
PSYCHOLOGY
11 Cognitive therapy for compulsive checking in obsessive-compulsive disorder: A pilot trial. Radomsky AS, Giraldo-O'Meara M, Wong SF, Dugas MJ, Gelfand LA, Rachman S, Schell S, Senn JM, Shafran R, Whittal ML 32070838
PSYCHOLOGY
12 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:Manipulating visual perspective for obsessional imagery and its impact on obsessive-compulsive symptoms in an analogue sample.
Authors:Wong SFHu DAPGrisham JR
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32361667?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.1016/j.janxdis.2020.102227
Publication:Journal of anxiety disorders
Keywords:CompulsionsImageryNeutralisationObsessive-Compulsive Disorder
PMID:32361667 Category:J Anxiety Disord Date Added:2020-05-04
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.
2 School of Psychology, UNSW Sydney, Kensington, Australia.
3 School of Psychology, UNSW Sydney, Kensington, Australia. Electronic address: jessicag@unsw.edu.au.

Description:

Manipulating visual perspective for obsessional imagery and its impact on obsessive-compulsive symptoms in an analogue sample.

J Anxiety Disord. 2020 Apr 28;72:102227

Authors: Wong SF, Hu DAP, Grisham JR

Abstract

Visual perspective may have an important role in the phenomenology of intrusive images relevant to psychological disorders such as obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). The aim of the current study was to examine the subjective and behavioural effects of manipulating visual perspective, to either field or observer, on intrusive images related to doubting and contamination concerns. One hundred and twelve undergraduate participants with high levels OCD symptoms were asked to identify and imagine an intrusive image related to either doubting or contamination concerns. We then randomly assigned them to re-visualise their image from either a field (first-person) or observer (third-person) visual perspective. Participants shifted towards using an observer perspective demonstrated a greater decrease on ratings of subjective measures of image-related distress, prospective likelihood of the image occurring, and urges to suppress the image, relative to those shifted to a field perspective. In addition, those in the observer perspective evidenced a greater decrease on behavioural indices relevant to OCD, such as reduced frequency of the intrusive image and decreased efforts to neutralise the image. We discuss implications for imagery in OCD.

PMID: 32361667 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]





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