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Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder01:28

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

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Protocol for Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation with Symptom Provocation to Treat Obsessive-compulsive Disorder
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Feeling of doing in obsessive-compulsive checking.

S Belayachi1, M Van der Linden

  • 1Cognitive Psychopathology Unit, University of Liège, Belgium. sanaa.belayachi@ulg.ac.be

Consciousness and Cognition
|February 26, 2010
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Individuals with checking symptoms experience reduced self-agency, failing to connect actions with expected outcomes. This suggests a potential cognitive dysfunction underlying checking behaviors.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Clinical Psychology

Background:

  • Self-agency relies on a comparing mechanism matching anticipated and actual outcomes.
  • Checking symptoms are associated with difficulties in subjective experiences of action and outcome.
  • Understanding experienced agency is crucial for explaining checking phenomena.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore the
  • feeling of doing
  • in individuals with checking symptoms.
  • To examine the mechanism of experienced agency for expected outcomes in checking behaviors.
  • To investigate the relationship between checking symptoms and self-agency.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized a task involving subliminal priming of action-effects to emulate outcome anticipation.
  • Assessed the feeling of causing effects when outcomes matched expectations.
  • Measured the relationship between checking symptoms and self-agency for primed outcomes.

Main Results:

  • A negative relationship was found between checking symptoms and self-agency for primed outcomes.
  • Individuals with checking symptoms showed impaired agency for expected outcomes.
  • This suggests a failure to perceive the correspondence between actions and their expected results.

Conclusions:

  • Undermined self-agency may play a role in checking phenomena.
  • Cognitive dysfunction related to agency may be linked to checking symptoms.
  • Further research is needed to explore the implications for treatment and understanding.