1. Suppressing disgust related thoughts and performance on a subsequent behavioural avoidance task: Implications for OCD
- Author
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Árni Kristjánsson, Eva R. Gunnarsdóttir, Paul M. G. Emmelkamp, Daniel Thor Olason, Torri Snæbjörnsson, Ragnar P. Ólafsson, and Klinische Psychologie (Psychologie, FMG)
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Emotions ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Affect (psychology) ,Developmental psychology ,Task (project management) ,Thinking ,Young Adult ,Cognition ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Psychological testing ,Group level ,Behavior ,Psychological Tests ,Thought suppression ,Middle Aged ,Disgust ,humanities ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Inhibition, Psychological ,Cognitive inhibition ,Female ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
We tested whether suppressing disgust related thoughts, compared with no suppression, differentially affected target thought frequency and emotional responses, and whether this was related to participants' cognitive inhibition abilities. We also tested whether different control instructions during a thought control task would affect performance on a subsequent behavioural avoidance task involving disgust related stimuli. Sixty university students, pre-selected on their level of disgust propensity/sensitivity, were instructed to either suppress or not to suppress all target-related thoughts following viewing of a disgust-related film fragment. Thought suppression immediately reduced target thought frequency, but only for participants with good inhibitory control. Thought suppression led to sustained thought frequency and levels of disgust after suppression was lifted, whereas a significant drop was observed for these measures in the no-suppression group. Thought control instructions did not affect performance on the behavioural avoidance task at the group level. However, regression analyses showed that changes in thought frequency during thought suppression interacted with beliefs concerning importance of thoughts and thought control when predicting fear and disgust reactions during the behavioural task.
- Published
- 2013