期刊论文详细信息
BMC Psychiatry
Cognitive Bias Modification (CBM) of obsessive compulsive beliefs
Research Article
Jessica R Grisham1  Alishia D Williams2 
[1] School of Psychology, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia;The Clinical Research Unit for Anxiety and Depression, School of Psychiatry, The University of New South Wales, Level 4 O’Brien Building at St. Vincent’s Hospital, Sydney, Australia;
关键词: Cognitive bias modification;    Interpretation bias;    Obsessive compulsive disorder;    Maladaptive beliefs;   
DOI  :  10.1186/1471-244X-13-256
 received in 2013-05-02, accepted in 2013-10-07,  发布年份 2013
来源: Springer
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【 摘 要 】

BackgroundCognitive bias modification (CBM) protocols have been developed to help establish the causal role of biased cognitive processing in maintaining psychopathology and have demonstrated therapeutic benefits in a range of disorders. The current study evaluated a cognitive bias modification training paradigm designed to target interpretation biases (CBM-I) associated with obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD).MethodsWe evaluated the impact of CBM-I on measures of interpretation bias, distress, and on responses to three OC stressor tasks designed to tap the core belief domains of Importance of Thoughts/Control, Perfectionism/Intolerance of Uncertainty, and Contamination/Estimation of Threat in a selected sample of community members reporting obsessive compulsive (OC) symptoms (N = 89).ResultsParticipants randomly assigned to the Positive condition evidenced a change in interpretation bias towards more positive and less negative OC-relevant interpretations following CBM-I compared to participants assigned to the Control condition. Importantly, a positivity bias was not observed for foil scenarios unrelated to the core OC belief domains. Further, participants in the Positive condition reported less distress and urge to neutralize following an OC stressor task designed to tap Importance of Thoughts/Control. No significant difference emerged on the indices of behavioural response to the OC stressor tasks. Severity of OC symptoms did not moderate the effects of positive CBM-I training.ConclusionsCBM-I appears effective in selectively targeting OC beliefs. Results need to be replicated in clinical samples in order for potential therapeutic benefit to be demonstrated.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   
© Williams and Grisham; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2013

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