نتایج جستجو برای: obsessional thoughts.

تعداد نتایج: 21661  

Journal: :Psychological reports 2005
Gwendolijn Olivia de Bruin Eric Rassin Peter Muris

The relation between cognitive self-consciousness and meta-worry, and their association with symptoms of worry and obsessional thoughts were examined. 53 undergraduate students completed the expanded version of the Cognitive Self-consciousness Scale, the Meta-worry subscale of the Anxious Thoughts Inventory, the Penn State Worry Questionnaire, and the Padua Inventory-Revised. Analysis showed th...

Journal: :Behaviour research and therapy 2001
C Purdon D A Clark

Wegner's (1994, Psychological Review, 101, 34-52) research on the paradoxical effect of thought suppression has been incorporated into contemporary cognitive-behavioural models of obsessive-compulsive disorder. However, findings on the effects of thought suppression on thought frequency have been inconsistent and few studies have actually examined the suppression of thoughts that are obsessiona...

Journal: :British Journal of Psychiatry 1991

ژورنال: روانشناسی معاصر 2011
بخشی پور, عباس, فرجی, رباب,

Abstract The aim of this study was to investigate the correlation between thought-action fusion beliefs and the clusters of obsessive-compulsive symptoms in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder. Based on this construct, the intrusive thoughts can have a direct effect on external events, or obsessional thoughts and negative acts are morally equivalent. The sample of this study were compr...

2011
Elizabeth Cosgrove

OCD is defined in ICD-10 as obsessional thoughts and/or compulsive actions, of at least two weeks duration, with associated anxiety. The obsessional thoughts of OCD are often distressing and can be in the form of urges, ideas and images (ICD-10). These disturbing thoughts are recognised as the patient’s own regardless of their unpleasant nature. The patient will often try initially to resist th...

Journal: :Depression and anxiety 2004
Jonathan S Abramowitz Brett J Deacon Carol M Woods David F Tolin

There is evidence that religion and other cultural influences are associated with the presentation of obsessive-compulsive symptoms, as well as beliefs and assumptions presumed to underlie the development and maintenance of these symptoms. We sought to further examine the relationship between Protestant religiosity and (1) various symptoms of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) (e.g., checking,...

2002
Kieron O’Connor

This article compares two models about the nature of obsessional intrusions: one, that they are just ‘normal thoughts’ whose obsessional significance derives from their appraisal; the other, that they are specific inferences about thoughts and things, which form conditional premises and are part of the obsessional reasoning. Support for the first model comes from questionnaire studies showing t...

2012
Laura E. Fabricant Anna Bardone-Cone

LAURA E. FABRICANT: A Comparison of Two Brief Interventions for Obsessional Thoughts: Exposure and Acceptance (Under the direction Of Jonathan Abramowitz) While exposure and response prevention (ERP) is currently the most effective psychological treatment for unwanted, intrusive thoughts associated with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), the procedures involved in ERP are challenging and may ...

2014
David A. Clark Jon Abramowitz Gillian M. Alcolado Pino Alonso Amparo Belloch Martine Bouvard Meredith E. Coles Guy Doron Hector Fernández-Álvarez Gemma Garcia-Soriano Marta Ghisi Beatriz Gomez Mujgan Inozu Richard Moulding Adam S. Radomsky Giti Shams Claudio Sica Gregoris Simos Wing Wong

A key assumption of contemporary cognitive-behavioral models of obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) is that obsessional thoughts exist on a continuum with “normal” unwanted intrusive thoughts. Recently, however, some authors have challenged this notion. The present study aimed to clarify (a) the extent that different types of intrusive thoughts in nonclinical individuals are associated with obs...

Journal: :Behaviour research and therapy 2013
Samuel G Myers Adrian Wells

The metacognitive model of obsessive-compulsive symptoms [Wells, A. (1997). Cognitive therapy of anxiety disorders: A practice manual and conceptual guide. Chichester, UK: Wiley] assigns a necessary causal role to metacognitive beliefs in the development of symptoms. The current study tested the model by evaluating the effects of experimentally manipulating such beliefs. A 2×2 factorial design ...

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