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Neuropsychological impairment associated with compulsive hoarding
Authors:Grisham Jessica R  Brown Timothy A  Savage Cary R  Steketee Gail  Barlow David H
Institution:University of New South Wales, Australia. jessicag@unsw.edu.au
Abstract:A group of patients with compulsive hoarding (n=30) was compared to a mixed clinical group (n=30) and a nonclinical community group (n=30) on laboratory tests of information-processing features hypothesized to be central to hoarding (memory, attention, and decision-making). Hoarding patients demonstrated slower and more variable reaction time, increased impulsivity, greater difficulty distinguishing targets and nontargets, and worse spatial attention relative to comparison groups. Multiple regression analyses demonstrated that slower reaction time and increased impulsivity were significantly related to hoarding symptoms over and above the effect of depression, schizotypy, and other obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) symptoms. There were no group differences on a test of emotion-based decision-making. Results are discussed in terms of previous findings and theoretical models of compulsive hoarding.
Keywords:Compulsive hoarding  Obsessive-compulsive disorder  Saving  Attention  Executive functioning
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