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Reward-related attentional capture is associated with severity of addictive and obsessive-compulsive behaviors.

Lucy AlbertellaMike E Le PelleySamuel Robin ChamberlainFred WestbrookLeonardo F FontenelleRebecca SegraveRico LeeDaniel PearsonMurat Yücel
Published in: Psychology of addictive behaviors : journal of the Society of Psychologists in Addictive Behaviors (2019)
A cue that signals reward can capture attention and elicit approach behaviors in people and animals. The current study examined whether attentional capture by reward-related cues is associated with severity of addiction-related and obsessive-compulsive behaviors. Participants were recruited via Mechanical Turk and included 143 adults (Mage = 34 years, SD = 8.5; 43% female) who had endorsed at least 1 addiction-related or obsessive-compulsive behavior in the past month. All assessment components were delivered via the Internet and included questionnaires to assess severity of compulsivity-related problems across addiction-related and obsessive-compulsive behaviors, as well as a visual search task to measure reward-related attentional capture. Reward-related attentional capture was associated with severity of compulsivity, transdiagnostically. These findings have implications for understanding the mechanisms that underlie compulsive behaviors and suggest that reward-related attentional capture is a promising transdiagnostic cognitive risk marker for compulsivity. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
Keyphrases
  • obsessive compulsive disorder
  • working memory
  • emergency department
  • healthcare
  • social media
  • drug induced