How willing are you? Willingness as a predictor of change during treatment of adults with obsessive-compulsive disorder
Depression and Anxiety2017Vol. 34(11), pp. 1057–1064
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2017 papers
Adam M. Reid, Lauryn E. Garner, Nathaniel Van Kirk, Christina Gironda, Jason W. Krompinger, Brian P. Brennan, Brittany M. Mathes, Sadie Cole Monaghan, Eric D. Tifft, Marie‐Christine André, Jordan E. Cattie, Jesse M. Crosby, Jason A. Elias
Abstract
Willingness to fully experience unpleasant and unwanted thoughts, emotions, and bodily sensations during exposures appears to be a marker of successful exposure therapy in adults with OCD. Future research should examine how willingness may enhance extinction learning during ERP.
Related Papers
- → Personality correlates and utilitarian judgments in the everyday context: Psychopathic traits and differential effects of empathy, social dominance orientation, and dehumanization beliefs(2019)19 cited
- → Amount of altruistic punishment accounts for subsequent emotional gratification in participants with primary psychopathy(2011)14 cited
- → The Information Used to Judge Supportiveness Depends on Whether the Judgment Reflects the Personality of Perceivers, the Objective Characteristics of Targets, or their Unique Relationships(2004)15 cited
- Susquehanna Chorale Spring Concert "Roots and Wings"(2017)
- → Do We Need Another Treatment Guide for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder?Do We Need Another Treatment Guide for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder?(2015)