Disgust propensity, fear of contamination and underlying dimensions of obsessive-compulsive symptoms

An exploratory study was conducted to investigate the mediating role of harm avoidance and incompleteness, the proposed underlying motivational factors of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), in the relationship between disgust and fear of contamination. In total, 170 undergratuate students at the U...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Petra Sif Markkusdottir Lappalainen 1989-
Other Authors: Háskóli Íslands
Format: Bachelor Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1946/11684
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftskemman:oai:skemman.is:1946/11684 2024-09-15T18:14:11+00:00 Disgust propensity, fear of contamination and underlying dimensions of obsessive-compulsive symptoms Petra Sif Markkusdottir Lappalainen 1989- Háskóli Íslands 2012-06 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1946/11684 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1946/11684 Sálfræði Áráttu- og þráhyggjuröskun Thesis Bachelor's 2012 ftskemman 2024-08-14T04:39:51Z An exploratory study was conducted to investigate the mediating role of harm avoidance and incompleteness, the proposed underlying motivational factors of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), in the relationship between disgust and fear of contamination. In total, 170 undergratuate students at the University of Iceland answered questionnaires and data from 148 participants was analysed using linear regression. The mediating effects of harm avoidance and incompleteness was tested using three different self-report measures, a measure of these two underlying motivational dimensions (OC-TCDQ) and a measure of symptoms of not-just-right experiences (NJRE-Q-R) and beliefs related to overestimation of threat and responsibility (OBQ-44). Results showed that disgust was associated with fear of contamination and that neither harm avoidance (OC-TCDQ) nor overestimation of threat (OBQ-44) significantly mediated the relationship between disgust and fear of contamination. However, incompleteness and the number of not-just-right experiences (NJRE-Q-R) were significant mediators. This indicates that contamination-related OCD symptoms may be more emotion or sensation-based rather than a result of cognitive distortions in people whose contamination symptoms are related to the emotion of disgust. Such patients may engage in compulsions when feeling disgusted not because they need to avoid possible future harm but rather because they cannot get rid of feelings of incompleteness if they do not perform their compulsions. Bachelor Thesis Iceland Skemman (Iceland)
institution Open Polar
collection Skemman (Iceland)
op_collection_id ftskemman
language English
topic Sálfræði
Áráttu- og þráhyggjuröskun
spellingShingle Sálfræði
Áráttu- og þráhyggjuröskun
Petra Sif Markkusdottir Lappalainen 1989-
Disgust propensity, fear of contamination and underlying dimensions of obsessive-compulsive symptoms
topic_facet Sálfræði
Áráttu- og þráhyggjuröskun
description An exploratory study was conducted to investigate the mediating role of harm avoidance and incompleteness, the proposed underlying motivational factors of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), in the relationship between disgust and fear of contamination. In total, 170 undergratuate students at the University of Iceland answered questionnaires and data from 148 participants was analysed using linear regression. The mediating effects of harm avoidance and incompleteness was tested using three different self-report measures, a measure of these two underlying motivational dimensions (OC-TCDQ) and a measure of symptoms of not-just-right experiences (NJRE-Q-R) and beliefs related to overestimation of threat and responsibility (OBQ-44). Results showed that disgust was associated with fear of contamination and that neither harm avoidance (OC-TCDQ) nor overestimation of threat (OBQ-44) significantly mediated the relationship between disgust and fear of contamination. However, incompleteness and the number of not-just-right experiences (NJRE-Q-R) were significant mediators. This indicates that contamination-related OCD symptoms may be more emotion or sensation-based rather than a result of cognitive distortions in people whose contamination symptoms are related to the emotion of disgust. Such patients may engage in compulsions when feeling disgusted not because they need to avoid possible future harm but rather because they cannot get rid of feelings of incompleteness if they do not perform their compulsions.
author2 Háskóli Íslands
format Bachelor Thesis
author Petra Sif Markkusdottir Lappalainen 1989-
author_facet Petra Sif Markkusdottir Lappalainen 1989-
author_sort Petra Sif Markkusdottir Lappalainen 1989-
title Disgust propensity, fear of contamination and underlying dimensions of obsessive-compulsive symptoms
title_short Disgust propensity, fear of contamination and underlying dimensions of obsessive-compulsive symptoms
title_full Disgust propensity, fear of contamination and underlying dimensions of obsessive-compulsive symptoms
title_fullStr Disgust propensity, fear of contamination and underlying dimensions of obsessive-compulsive symptoms
title_full_unstemmed Disgust propensity, fear of contamination and underlying dimensions of obsessive-compulsive symptoms
title_sort disgust propensity, fear of contamination and underlying dimensions of obsessive-compulsive symptoms
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1946/11684
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1946/11684
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