Probability learning and coping in dysphoria and obsessive-compulsive tendencies |
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Authors: | Kerry J. Mothersill Richard W.J. Neufeld |
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Affiliation: | University of Western Ontario Canada |
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Abstract: | The processing of stress-relevant categorical events and their contributions to subsequent probability judgments were examined among subjects who were psychometrically categorized as dysphoric, obsessive-compulsive, or “control.” stress-relevant symptomatology of depression was considered to be characterized by a deficit of active counterstress coping activity and obsessive-compulsiveness by ritualistic efforts which have little or no direct effect on stress occurrence. Subjects were presented with a sequence of stressful (loud white noise) and benign (illumination of a green light) events in association with a series of discrete stimuli (alphabetic letters) in three conditions of counterstress activity. Results generally supported the predicted tendency to learn probability information primarily in conditions which reflected the subjects' characteristic ways of responding to stress. Obsessive-compulsives acquired the information primarily in a “ritualistic” context, controls in an active coping context, and dysphorics in both a coping deficit context and unexpectedly in an active coping context. The role of enhanced stressor predicability in maintaining typical stress response patterns of the three groups was discussed. |
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Keywords: | Kerry J. Mothersill is now with the Department of Psychology Holy Cross Hospital 2210 2nd St. S.W. Calgary T25 1S6 Alberta Canada and requests for reprints should be sent to him there. |
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