沉思
心理学
心情
苦恼
情感(语言学)
临床心理学
分散注意力
思想压抑
精神科
认知
强迫症
沟通
神经科学
作者
Karina Wahl,Marcel van den Hout,Carlotta V. Heinzel,Martin Kollárik,Andrea H. Meyer,Charles Benoy,Götz Berberich,Katharina Domschke,Andrew T. Gloster,Gassan Gradwohl,Maria Hofecker,Andreas Jähne,Stefan Koch,Anne Katrin Külz,Franz Moggi,Christine Poppe,Andreas Riedel,Michael Rufer,Christian Stierle,Ulrich Voderholzer,Sebastian Walther,Roselind Lieb
摘要
Rumination is common in individuals diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). We sought to clarify the causal role of rumination in the immediate and intermediate maintenance of obsessive-compulsive symptoms and depressed mood. In total, 145 individuals diagnosed with OCD were asked to read aloud their most distressing obsessive thought (OT). OT activation was followed by a thought-monitoring phase in which frequency of the OT was assessed. Participants were randomly allocated to one of three experimental conditions: rumination about obsessive-compulsive symptoms, rumination about mood, or distraction. Ratings of distress, urge to neutralize, and depressed mood and frequency ratings of the OTs were taken before and after the experimental manipulation. Obsessive-compulsive symptom severity and affect were assessed 2, 4, and 24 hr after the laboratory experiment using ecological momentary assessment. Compared to distraction, both types of rumination resulted in an immediate reduced decline of distress, urge to neutralize, depressed mood, and frequency of OTs, with medium to large effect sizes. Rumination about obsessive-compulsive symptoms did not have a stronger immediate effect than rumination about mood. Rumination about obsessive-compulsive symptoms increased obsessive-compulsive symptom severity and reduced positive affect compared to rumination about mood 24 hr later. Regarding negative affect, there was no difference in effect between the two types of rumination in the intermediate term. To conclude, rumination in OCD has an immediate and intermediate maintaining effect on obsessive-compulsive symptoms and mood and may require additional psychological interventions that supplement cognitive behavioral therapy. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI