Distinguishing obsessive features and worries: the role of thought-action fusion |
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Authors: | Coles M E Mennin D S Heimberg R G |
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Affiliation: | Adult Anxieny Clinic of Temple University, Department of Psychology, Philadelphia, PA 19122-6085, USA. mcoles@astro.ocis.temple.edu |
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Abstract: | Obsessions are a key feature of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and chronic worry is the cardinal feature of generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). However, these two cognitive processes are conceptually very similar, and there is a need to determine how they differ. Recent studies have attempted to identify cognitive processes that may be differentially related to obsessive features and worry. In the current study we proposed that (1) obsessive features and worry could be differentiated and that (2) a measure of the cognitive process thought-action fusion would distinguish between obsessive features and worry, being strongly related to obsessive features after controlling for the effects of worry. These hypotheses were supported in a sample of 173 undergraduate students. Thought-action fusion may be a valuable construct in differentiating between obsessive features and worry. |
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