Danger appraisals as prospective predictors of disgust and avoidance

Recent theories posit that cognitive factors explain the development and maintenance of contamination fears associated with obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). Few studies to date have aimed to establish causality or temporal precedence for cognitions predicting OCD-relevant distress and avoidance...

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Main Author: Dorfan, Nicole Michelle
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
OCD
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/935
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-9352018-01-05T17:22:48Z Danger appraisals as prospective predictors of disgust and avoidance Dorfan, Nicole Michelle Cognition Appraisal Contamination Disgust Anxiety OCD Recent theories posit that cognitive factors explain the development and maintenance of contamination fears associated with obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). Few studies to date have aimed to establish causality or temporal precedence for cognitions predicting OCD-relevant distress and avoidance. The current study used a prospective design to assess threat appraisals, personality traits, and obsessive compulsive symptoms in an unselected sample of university students and community members (N = 105) several days prior to a contamination behavioural approach task (BAT) in a public washroom. Results of the hierarchical regressions demonstrated that prospective danger appraisals significantly predicted both disgust and avoidance on the BAT, even when controlling for neuroticism, disgust sensitivity, and OCD symptoms. In contrast, looming germ spread appraisals and responsibility appraisals were not significant predictors of the BAT. Results from in vivo distress ratings and implicit reaction time data indicated that disgust is more strongly associated with contaminants compared with anxiety. The findings of this research suggest that psychological treatment for contamination concerns should include monitoring of disgust as a process and outcome variable in exposure paradigms, and focus on reappraisal of danger estimates related to disease in cognitive paradigms. Arts, Faculty of Psychology, Department of Graduate 2008-06-20T21:05:44Z 2008-06-20T21:05:44Z 2008 2008-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/935 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 763237 bytes application/pdf University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Cognition
Appraisal
Contamination
Disgust
Anxiety
OCD
spellingShingle Cognition
Appraisal
Contamination
Disgust
Anxiety
OCD
Dorfan, Nicole Michelle
Danger appraisals as prospective predictors of disgust and avoidance
description Recent theories posit that cognitive factors explain the development and maintenance of contamination fears associated with obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). Few studies to date have aimed to establish causality or temporal precedence for cognitions predicting OCD-relevant distress and avoidance. The current study used a prospective design to assess threat appraisals, personality traits, and obsessive compulsive symptoms in an unselected sample of university students and community members (N = 105) several days prior to a contamination behavioural approach task (BAT) in a public washroom. Results of the hierarchical regressions demonstrated that prospective danger appraisals significantly predicted both disgust and avoidance on the BAT, even when controlling for neuroticism, disgust sensitivity, and OCD symptoms. In contrast, looming germ spread appraisals and responsibility appraisals were not significant predictors of the BAT. Results from in vivo distress ratings and implicit reaction time data indicated that disgust is more strongly associated with contaminants compared with anxiety. The findings of this research suggest that psychological treatment for contamination concerns should include monitoring of disgust as a process and outcome variable in exposure paradigms, and focus on reappraisal of danger estimates related to disease in cognitive paradigms. === Arts, Faculty of === Psychology, Department of === Graduate
author Dorfan, Nicole Michelle
author_facet Dorfan, Nicole Michelle
author_sort Dorfan, Nicole Michelle
title Danger appraisals as prospective predictors of disgust and avoidance
title_short Danger appraisals as prospective predictors of disgust and avoidance
title_full Danger appraisals as prospective predictors of disgust and avoidance
title_fullStr Danger appraisals as prospective predictors of disgust and avoidance
title_full_unstemmed Danger appraisals as prospective predictors of disgust and avoidance
title_sort danger appraisals as prospective predictors of disgust and avoidance
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/935
work_keys_str_mv AT dorfannicolemichelle dangerappraisalsasprospectivepredictorsofdisgustandavoidance
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