Abnormal Psychology

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Anxiety Disorders 305


Psychological Factors


Psychological factors that help to explain OCD focus primarily on the way that op-


erant conditioning affects compulsions and on the process by which normal obses-


sional thoughts become pathological.


Behavioral Explanations: Operant Conditioning and Compulsions


Compulsive behavior can provide short-term relief from anxiety that is produced


by an obsession. Operant conditioning occurs when the behavior is negatively rein-


forced: Because it (temporarily) relieves the anxiety, it is more likely to recur when


the thoughts arise again. All of Howard Hughes’s various eccentric behaviors—his


washing, his precautions against germs, his exerting control over the minute specifi cs


of his memos (in “Notes on Notes”), his hoarding of newspapers and magazines—


temporarily relieved his anxiety.


Cognitive Explanations: Obsessional Thinking


If you’ve ever had a crush on someone or been in love, you may have spent a lot


of time thinking about the person—it may have even felt like an obsession. Such


obsessions arise surprisingly frequently (Weissman et al., 1994), but they don’t usu-


ally develop into a disorder. One theory about how a normal obsession becomes


part of OCD is that the person decides that his or her thoughts refer to something


unacceptable, such as killing someone or, as was the case with Howard Hughes,


catching someone else’s illness (Salkovskis, 1985). These obsessive thoughts, which


the individual believes imply some kind of danger, lead to very uncomfortable feel-


ings. Mental or behavioral rituals arise in order to reduce these feelings. A related


theory is that for some people who develop OCD, a disturbing thought is the moral


equivalent of actually performing the act, which leads to greater distress in re-


sponse to the initial obsession (Rachman, 1997; Shafran, Thordarson, & Rachman,


1996). Both theories contrast a normal response to “unacceptable” thoughts (an


awareness that such thoughts don’t need to be controlled and an ability to let them


fade from consciousness) with the belief of OCD patients that such thoughts must


be controlled—and trying to do so amplifi es the thoughts (Tolin, Worhunsky, &


Maltby, 2006).


Consistent with this theoretical approach, researchers have found that some

mental processes function differently in people with OCD than in people without


the disorder. In particular, such patients are more likely to pay attention to and re-


member threat-relevant stimuli, and their processing of complex visual stimuli (as,


for example, is necessary to decide whether an object has been touched by a dirty


or clean tissue among people with contamination fears) is impaired (Constans et al.,


1995; Muller & Roberts, 2005; Radomsky, Rachman, & Hammond, 2001). Such


processing may make threatening stimuli easier to remember and harder to ignore,


which keeps them in the patients’ awareness longer (Muller & Roberts, 2005).


Studies of memory also fi nd that those with the checking type of OCD and those


in a control group had equally accurate memories, but the OCD patients had less


confi dence in the accuracy of their recognition memories (MacDonald et al., 1997;


McNally & Kohlbeck 1993; Muller & Roberts, 2005). Thus, because they are more


likely to doubt their memories, they are more likely to want to go back and check.


Social Factors


Two types of social factors can contribute to OCD. One is stress, which can infl u-


ence the onset and course of the disorder; the other is culture, which can infl uence


the particular content of symptoms.


Stress


The onset of OCD often follows a stressor, and the severity of the symptoms is often


proportional to the severity of the stressor (Turner & Beidel, 1988), which might


range from taking a vacation at one end to the death of a family member at the


other. However, such fi ndings are not always easy to interpret. For example, one


study found that people with more severe OCD tend to have more kinds of family

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