Experimental manipulations of responsibility: an analogue test for models of obsessive-compulsive disorder.

1995 
Abstract Several authors attribute excessive responsibility a predominant role in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) [Salkovskis, P. M. (1985) Behaviour Research and Therapy , 23, 571–583; Rachman, S. (1993) Behaviour Research and Therapy , 31, 149–154; van Oppen, P. & Arntz, A. (1994) Behaviour Research and Therapy , 32, 79–87]. The present studies aimed at demonstrating the link between different levels of perceived responsibility and checking behaviors by experimentally manipulating responsibility in non-clinical S s. In the first study, a sound recognition task was used to compare checking behaviors in S s with high (HR) and low (LR) perceived responsibility. Only one variable was significantly different, S s from the HR group reporting more anxiety during the task than S s from the LR group. Results did not support a link between responsibility and checking behavior. In a second study HR and LR S s were compared on a manual classification task. Subjects from the HR group hesitated and checked more, and reported more preoccupation with errors and anxiety during the task than S s from the LR group. Since perceived severity of the outcome was the most variable affected by the manipulation, the implications for current models of OCD are discussed and an alternative explanation is attempted. Finally, clinical implications are examined and suggestions are made for future directions of research.
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