Authors
Stanley Rachman, Roz Shafran, David Mitchell, John Trant, B Teachman
Publication date
1996/11/1
Journal
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Volume
34
Issue
11-12
Pages
889-898
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Many patients with obsessive-compulsive problems engage in neutralizing activity to reduce or “cancel out” the effects of the obsession. In many cases, neutralization is covert and therefore difficult to assess or manipulate experimentally. We hypothesize that neutralization resembles overt compulsions. In particular, it was predicted that: (i) neutralization reduces the anxiety evoked by unacceptable thoughts, and (ii) if neutralization is delayed, anxiety and the urge to neutralize will decay naturally. To test the hypothesis, 63 Ss prone to a cognitive bias known to be associated with obsessional complaints (thought-action fusion) were asked to write a sentence that would evoke anxiety. Measures of anxiety (and other variables of interest such as guilt, responsibility and the likelihood of harm) were taken. Subjects were then instructed to either immediately neutralize (n = 29) or delay for 20 min (n = 34), after which time …
Total citations
199619971998199920002001200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320241329446874918771013142211881111191081396
Scholar articles
S Rachman, R Shafran, D Mitchell, J Trant… - Behaviour Research and Therapy, 1996