Centre for Integrative Neuroscience and Neurodynamics, School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences, University of Reading, Reading, UK.
Centre for Integrative Neuroscience and Neurodynamics, School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences, University of Reading, Reading, UK.
Int J Psychophysiol. 2022 Sep;179:43-55. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2022.06.011. Epub 2022 Jun 24.
Checking behaviour has been described as a form of preventative behaviour used by an individual to establish control over the environment and avoid future misfortune. However, when compulsive, checking behaviours can become disabling and distressing and have been linked to the maintenance of anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders. Despite this, there is limited literature across the field that has assessed the impact of dimensional measures of anxiety and obsessive-compulsive features (i.e., negative affect, uncertainty, and perfectionism) in driving checking behaviour. As such, the present study examined the impact of individual differences in self-reported anxiety and obsessive-compulsive features on subjective, behavioural, and physiological indices during a visual discrimination and checking task (n = 87). Higher self-reported anxiety and obsessive-compulsive features were associated with higher subjective ratings of unpleasantness and the urge to check during the task. Moreover, higher self-reported anxiety and obsessive-compulsive features related to general negative affect, uncertainty, and perfectionism were associated with greater checking frequency during the task. Lastly, stronger obsessional beliefs about perfectionism and the need for certainty were found to predict poorer accuracy, slower reaction times, and higher engagement of the corrugator supercilii during the task. In sum, these findings demonstrate how different anxiety and obsessive-compulsive features, in particular perfectionism and the need for certainty, may relate to and maintain checking behaviour in low threat contexts, which likely has implications for models of excessive and persistent checking in anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders.
检查行为被描述为个体用来控制环境并避免未来不幸的一种预防性行为。然而,当检查行为成为强迫性的时,它可能会变得使人丧失能力和痛苦,并与焦虑和强迫症的维持有关。尽管如此,该领域的文献有限,尚未评估焦虑和强迫症特征(即负性情绪、不确定性和完美主义)的维度测量对检查行为的影响。因此,本研究在视觉辨别和检查任务中(n=87),检查了个体报告的焦虑和强迫症特征差异对主观、行为和生理指标的影响。更高的自我报告焦虑和强迫症特征与任务期间更高的不愉快主观评分和检查冲动相关。此外,更高的自我报告焦虑和强迫症特征与一般负性情绪、不确定性和完美主义相关,与任务期间更高的检查频率相关。最后,发现对完美主义和确定性的强迫性信念越强,预测任务期间准确性越差、反应时间越慢、皱眉肌参与度越高。总之,这些发现表明,不同的焦虑和强迫症特征,特别是完美主义和确定性需求,可能与低威胁环境中的检查行为有关,并维持这种行为,这可能对焦虑和强迫症中过度和持续检查的模型产生影响。