Abstract
Background and Objectives
Obsessive compulsive (OC)-like perseveration paradoxically increases feelings of uncertainty. We studied whether the underlying mechanism between perseveration and uncertainty is a reduced accessibility of meaning (‘semantic satiation’).
Methods
OCD patients (n = 24) and matched non-clinical controls (n = 24) repeated words 2 (non-perseveration) or 20 times (perseveration). They decided whether this word was related to another target word. Speed of relatedness judgments and feelings of dissociative uncertainty were measured. The effects of real-life perseveration on dissociative uncertainty were tested in a smaller subsample of the OCD group (n = 9).
Results
Speed of relatedness judgments was not affected by perseveration. However, both groups reported more dissociative uncertainty after perseveration compared to non-perseveration, which was higher in OCD patients. Patients reported more dissociative uncertainty after ‘clinical’ perseveration compared to non-perseveration.
Limitations
Both parts of this study are limited by some methodological issues and a small sample size.
Conclusions
Although the mechanism behind ‘perseveration → uncertainty’ is still unclear, results suggest that the effects of perseveration are counterproductive.
Obsessive compulsive (OC)-like perseveration paradoxically increases feelings of uncertainty. We studied whether the underlying mechanism between perseveration and uncertainty is a reduced accessibility of meaning (‘semantic satiation’).
Methods
OCD patients (n = 24) and matched non-clinical controls (n = 24) repeated words 2 (non-perseveration) or 20 times (perseveration). They decided whether this word was related to another target word. Speed of relatedness judgments and feelings of dissociative uncertainty were measured. The effects of real-life perseveration on dissociative uncertainty were tested in a smaller subsample of the OCD group (n = 9).
Results
Speed of relatedness judgments was not affected by perseveration. However, both groups reported more dissociative uncertainty after perseveration compared to non-perseveration, which was higher in OCD patients. Patients reported more dissociative uncertainty after ‘clinical’ perseveration compared to non-perseveration.
Limitations
Both parts of this study are limited by some methodological issues and a small sample size.
Conclusions
Although the mechanism behind ‘perseveration → uncertainty’ is still unclear, results suggest that the effects of perseveration are counterproductive.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 1-10 |
| Journal | Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry |
| Volume | 52 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Sept 2016 |
Keywords
- OCD
- dissociation
- perseveration
- uncertainty
- semantic
- satiation