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The effect of task difficulty on decision-making: Differences between obsessive-compulsive disorder and non-affective psychosis

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Date

2018-01-01

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Serrano-Guerrero, Estrella
Francisco Rodriguez-Testal, Juan
Martin-Rodriguez, Agustin
Ruiz-Veguilla, Miguel

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Sage publications ltd
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Abstract

The aim was to determine whether there are differences between groups in jumping to conclusions and the number of beads required to make a decision based on task difficulty. An assessment was made of 19 patients with non-affective psychosis, 19 with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and 19 healthy controls. The Beads Task scale was used in its two versions. Patients with non-affective psychosis jumped to conclusions. There was significant interaction between group and task difficulty. Increased difficulty of the task did not affect the number of beads patients with non-affective psychosis or OCD needed to make their decision. However, healthy controls needed to see more beads before they could make a decision in the hard test than in the easy one. Patients with non-affective psychosis jump to conclusions, but neither this group nor the OCD patients benefit from the changes in task difficulty when making their decisions.

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Decision-making, jumping to conclusions, non-affective psychosis, obsessive-compulsive disorder, task difficulty, Community assessment, Beads task, Conclusions, Validation, Delusions, Model, Bias, Schizophrenia, Metaanalysis, Individuals

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