Author:
Clair A.-H.,N’Diaye K.,Baroukh T.,Pochon J.-B.,Morgiève M.,Hantouche E.,Falissard B.,Pelissolo A.,Mallet L.
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundRepetitive checking in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) would serve to relieve obsession-related anxiety and/or to compensate memory deficit, but experimental literature on this subject is inconsistent. The main objective is to test the influence of obsession-related anxiety and memory on repetitive checking in OCD.MethodsTwenty-three OCD checkers, 17 OCD non-checkers and 41 controls performed a delayed-matching-to-sample task with an unrestricted checking option. Some stimuli were obsession-related in order to measure the influence of anxiety on checking. A version of the task without checking possibility was used to assess memory abilities.ResultsOCD checkers had similar memory performances but checked more than the other groups when presented with non-anxiogenic stimuli. Level of anxiety associated to the stimulus did not influence the number of checks.ConclusionsIncreased checking in OCD checkers, being independent of memory abilities and primary obsession-related anxiety, would, therefore, be closer to an automated behaviour than a coping strategy.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
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