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Showing 3 results for Obsessive Compulsive

, , , ,
Volume 5, Issue 1 (6-2017)
Abstract

working memory is the comprehensive cognitive system that embedded attentional and memorical mechanisms and therefore can be used in systematic research of cognitive problems. The aim of this study was to investigate the predictive role of working memory capacity and executive functions (shifting, inhibition and updating) for Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.  We selected 164 student   (90 male and 74 female)    from university of Tehran with random sampling method  and they completed Maudsley Obsessional – Compulsive Inventory (Hodgson & Rachman, 1977), the Digit Backward Span Task (workingmemory capacity), Forward Span task (Short Term Memory), Stroop (inhibition, Spreen & Strauss, 1998), Set- Switching Task (shifting, Rogers & Monsell, 1995) and Keep Track Task (updating, Martinez, et al., 2011). Data analyzing used regression showed working memory and executive function totally predict considerable amount (67 percent) of obsessive compulsive predisposition. Therefore it can be concluding, obsessive people have crucial weakness in storage, monitoring and executive cognitive function (in general attention control) and we can use training in these functions as treatment strategies.


Phd Fatemeh Shahamat Dehsorkh,
Volume 5, Issue 2 (9-2017)
Abstract

The crucial difference between people with OCD and non-clinical individuals would be the presence of OCD-related dysfunctional beliefs. compulsions are aimed at undoing the intrusive thoughts.  With respect of core symptoms of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder(OCD) deficit in cognitive inhibition is probable. But results are inconsistent in this field. Here researchers are aimed to study the probable IOR deficit in clinical sample of compulsive washing . this study is a causal- comparative research.  Beck Depression Inventory - version II (BDI-II), Obsessional Beliefs Questionnaire- 44 (OBQ-44) and emotional Inhibition of Return test were administered of  47 clinical samples of compulsive washing. The results of MANOVA analysis showed that there is no differences between two groups in IOR (F(4,42)=-0.578, P=0.735; Wilk’s Lambda= 0.955; Partial η2= 0.045). Moreover there is a significant deference between reaction times in valid and invalid trails  (t= 4.209; P≤0.01) that shows the general IOR phenomena in participants. This research failed to show  cognitive inhibition deficit  in clinical samples of compulsive washing according to their dysfunctional beliefs.IT seems that IOR deficient is not detectable in OCD patients according to exogenous attention. Other theoretical and experimental implications are discussed.


Leila Fatehi Khoshknabk, Dr Majid Mahmood Alilo, Dr Ali Asgharzadeh, Dr Amir Panahali, Dr Akbar Rezaei,
Volume 12, Issue 4 (3-2025)
Abstract

The present study aimed to compare recognition performance and memory confidence among individuals with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)—specifically the washing and checking subtypes—and those with Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD). This research employed a causal-comparative, ex post facto design. A total of 45 participants were selected through convenience sampling from patients diagnosed by psychiatrists at Razi Hospital in Tabriz in 2023, and were categorized into three equal groups: individuals with washing-type OCD, checking-type OCD, and GAD. The instruments used in this study included the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders, developed by Spitzer, Gibbon, and Williams in 1995; a computerized word memory test designed to assess recognition and confidence based on the model developed by Koriat and colleagues in 1997; and a researcher-made demographic questionnaire. Data were analyzed using multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA). The results revealed significant differences among the groups in both recognition and memory confidence (P < 0.05), with the checking-type OCD group demonstrating significantly lower scores than the other two groups. These findings highlight the role of cognitive impairments—particularly in memory and metacognitive confidence—in the psychopathology of the checking subtype of OCD.


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