Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder as a Disturbance of Security Motivation.
- 1 January 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Psychological Association (APA) in Psychological Review
- Vol. 111 (1), 111-127
- https://doi.org/10.1037/0033-295x.111.1.111
Abstract
The authors hypothesize that the symptoms of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), despite their apparent nonrationality, have what might be termed an epistemic origin--that is, they stem from an inability to generate the normal "feeling of knowing" that would otherwise signal task completion and terminate the expression of a security motivational system. The authors compare their satiety-signal construct, which they term yedasentience, to various other senses of the feeling of knowing and indicate why OCD-like symptoms would stem from the abnormal absence of such a terminator emotion. In addition, they advance a tentative neuropsychological model to explain its underpinnings. The proposed model integrates many previous disparate observations and concepts about OCD and embeds it within the broader understanding of normal motivation.Keywords
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