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Emotional Conflict Studies Of Ocd Patients

Posted on:2013-08-12Degree:MasterType:Thesis
Country:ChinaCandidate:K ZhaoFull Text:PDF
GTID:2244330371978860Subject:Applied Psychology
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
Objective:In this study,patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder and normal subjects, the wordcomputer test part of facial expression images and emotional words-faces the simultaneouspresentation of pictures as stimuli, the aim is to explore the changing stimulate the Pictureproperty and interference information attributespatients with obsessive-compulsive disorder andnormal subjects’ emotional conflicts characteristics and differences.In this study, the SCL-90, Y-BOCS questionnaires, inspection questionnaire scores andemotio nal test scores of conflict relations.Methods:The subjects were randomly selected from October2011to March2012during the FirstAffiliated Hospital of Shanxi Medical University, Division of Mental Health and Mental HealthCenter in Shanxi Province neurosis Branch inpatients and outpatients diagnosed withobsessive-compulsive disorder. Normal subjects randomly selected age, gender, education,marital status and into the group forced the disease patient-matched normal healthy people.Questionnaire tool: SCL-90, Y-BOCS bound guidance language, read by a professi onalpsychological evaluation, and supervision of the applied measurement process is completed onthe spot to recover. The measure was the overall situation and the severity ofobsessive-compulsive symptoms.Computer tests: experiments using the DMDX software presented stimuli for facialexpression pictures with emotional words. Faces-emotional word pictures-sad group andpleasure-aversion group. Subject divided into group of patients with obsessive-compulsivedisorder and normal subjects group. The same experiment, the results were comp ared.Results:(1) In patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder and normal subjects conflict detection tasks,there are the emotional consistency effect (p <0.05).(2) In patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder and normal subjects there are differences inthe reaction time of the collision detection (p <0.001), number of errors was no significantdifference (p>0.05).(3) In patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder and normal subjects in the judgment of facialexpression pictures domestic response to experimental stimuli and the foreign faces emoticonsfor both reactions in the experimental stimuli was significantly (p <0.05) in number of errors, thedifference was not significant (p>0.05).(4) These results indicate that the reaction was emotional conflict test and the SCL-90total score,compulsive symptoms, interpersonal sensitivity, depression, anxiety, hostility, terror, paranoia,psychosis factor scores correlated significantly (p <0.01).points and the body, diet, sleep factorwas significantly correlated (p <0.05). The number of errors and the SCL-90total score,compulsive symptoms, interpersonal sensitivity, depression, anxiety, paranoia, psychosis factorscores correlated significantly (p <0.01), and somatization, hostility was significantly (p <0.05),and terror. sleep eating related not significant (p>0.05). When the reaction was emotional conflict test, the number of errors and Y-BOCS total score, obsessions subscale, compulsivebehavior subscale scores were correlated significantly (p <0.01).(5)Obsessive-compulsive disorder response and the SCL-90obsessive-compulsive symptoms,interpersonal sensitivity, paranoid factor scores correlated significantly (p <0.01), and pointswith horror, psychosis factor was significantly correlated (p <0.05), and total score,somatization,depression, anxiety, hostility, sleep and diet factor score was not significantlycorrelated (p>0.05). The number of errors to patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder andSCL-90the scores were not significant (p>0.05). Forced disease in patients with the emotionalconflicts test reaction with the Y-BOCS total score related significantly (p-<0.01), andobsessions component tables related to significant (<0.05), and compulsive behavior componenttables related not significant with (p->0.05). The number of errors and Y-BOCS total score,compulsive behavior subscale was significantly correlated (p <0.05), and the obsessions subscalewas not significantly correlated (p>0.05).Conclusion:(1) In patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder and normal subjects emotional consistencyeffect in the collision detection task.(2) In patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder and normal subjects there are differences inthe reaction time of the collision detection, the number of errors are also differences.(3) In patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder and normal subjects in the judgment of facialexpression pictures domestic response to experimental stimuli and abroad facial expressionpictures for the reaction in the experimental stimuli are different, no difference in the number oferrors.(4) When the reaction of all the emotional conflict test and the number of errors with their part ofSCL-90and Y-BOCS score was significantly correlated.(5) Patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder, emotional conflict test reaction and the numberof errors with their part of SCL-90and Y-BOCS score was significantly correlated.
Keywords/Search Tags:emotional conflict, obsessive-compulsive disorder, SCL-90, Y-BOCS
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