Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom; Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience Institute, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience Institute, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom; Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom; Liaison Psychiatry Service, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough National Health Service Foundation Trust, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging. 2019 Feb;4(2):200-209. doi: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2018.09.014. Epub 2018 Oct 9.
In obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), actions persist despite being inappropriate to the situation and without relationship to the overall goal. Dysfunctional beliefs have traditionally been postulated to underlie this condition. More recently, OCD has been characterized in terms of an imbalance between the goal-directed and the habit systems. To test these competing hypotheses, we used a novel experimental task designed to test subjective action-outcome knowledge of the effectiveness of actions (i.e., instrumental contingency), together with the balance between goal-directed and habitual responding.
Twenty-seven patients with OCD and 27 healthy control subjects were tested on a novel task involving the degradation of an action-outcome contingency. Sensitivity to instrumental contingency and the extent to which explicitly reported action-outcome knowledge guided behavior were probed by measuring response rate and subjectively reported judgments.
Patients with OCD responded more than healthy control subjects in situations in which an action was less causally related to obtaining an outcome. However, patients showed intact explicit action-outcome knowledge, as assessed by self-report. In patients, the relationship between causality judgment and responding was altered; therefore, their actions were dissociated from explicit action-outcome knowledge.
These findings indicate reduced sensitivity to instrumental contingency in OCD, reinforcing the notion of a deficient goal-directed system in this disorder. By showing a dissociation between subjectively reported action-outcome knowledge and behavior, the data provide experimental evidence for the ego-dystonic nature of OCD.
在强迫症(OCD)中,尽管行动与情境不相关且与总体目标无关,但仍会持续进行。传统上认为,功能失调的信念是这种情况的基础。最近,OCD 已被描述为目标导向系统和习惯系统之间的失衡。为了检验这些相互竞争的假设,我们使用了一种新的实验任务,旨在测试对行动结果有效性的主观行动-结果知识(即工具性关联),以及目标导向和习惯性反应之间的平衡。
我们对 27 名强迫症患者和 27 名健康对照组进行了一项新任务的测试,该任务涉及到行动-结果关联的退化。通过测量反应率和主观报告的判断,探测了对工具性关联的敏感性以及明确报告的行动-结果知识对行为的指导程度。
与健康对照组相比,强迫症患者在行动与获得结果的因果关系较弱的情况下反应更为频繁。然而,患者表现出明显的明确的行动-结果知识,如自我报告所示。在患者中,因果判断和反应之间的关系发生了改变;因此,他们的行动与明确的行动-结果知识分离。
这些发现表明 OCD 中对工具性关联的敏感性降低,这加强了该障碍中目标导向系统不足的观点。通过显示主观报告的行动-结果知识和行为之间的分离,数据为 OCD 的自我厌恶性质提供了实验证据。