Results 171 to 180 of about 4,046 (210)
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Intervention in Compulsive Hoarding
Behavior Modification, 2001Historically, the compulsive hoarding of possessions has been examined in the context of other obsessive-compulsive disorders. More recently, researchers have begun to explore compulsive hoarding as a separate and distinct syndrome. The cognitive behavioral model proposed by Frost and Hartl suggests that deficits in information processing, emotional ...
J A, Cermele +2 more
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Hoarding and Obsessive-Compulsive Symptoms
Behavior Modification, 1996The present study attempts to extend recent research on the relation between hoarding and obsessive-compulsive experiences. In both college student and community samples, hoarding was associated with higher scores on the Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (YBOCS). The relationship was stronger among the community sample, in which there was a greater
R O, Frost, M S, Krause, G, Steketee
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Hypothesis: Compulsive hoarding as an atavism
Medical Hypotheses, 2019In this hypothesis paper, we propose that hoarding disorder may be an ancestral mammalian behavior, possibly hard-wired but dormant in present-day humans, that can be activated by traumatic experiences. To support this claim, we describe hoarding in ancestral mammals and provide examples of recurrence of traits, or atavisms, in humans and other mammals,
Sandro René Pinto de Sousa, Miguel +1 more
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American Journal of Psychotherapy, 1987
Four cases of compulsive hoarding are described, all sharing the following characteristics: (1) onset in the twenties, (2) preoccupation with hoarding to the exclusion of work and family, (3) diminished insight, (4) little interest in receiving treatment, (5) no attempt to curb their compulsion. They do not show clear psychotic features.
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Four cases of compulsive hoarding are described, all sharing the following characteristics: (1) onset in the twenties, (2) preoccupation with hoarding to the exclusion of work and family, (3) diminished insight, (4) little interest in receiving treatment, (5) no attempt to curb their compulsion. They do not show clear psychotic features.
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Compulsive buying, compulsive hoarding, and obsessive-compulsive disorder
Behavior Therapy, 2002McElroy, Keck, and Phillips (1995) hypothesized that compulsive buying belongs to a compulsive-impulsive spectrum and should be related to obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). This study compared compulsive buyers to noncompulsive buyers on hoarding and OCD symptoms.
Randy O. Frost +2 more
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Recent advances in compulsive hoarding
Current Psychiatry Reports, 2008Compulsive hoarding is a common and often disabling neuropsychiatric disorder. This article reviews the conceptualization, phenomenology, diagnosis, etiology, neurobiology, and treatment of compulsive hoarding. Compulsive hoarding is part of a discrete clinical syndrome that includes difficulty discarding, urges to save, excessive acquisition ...
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The distinctiveness of compulsive hoarding from obsessive–compulsive disorder
Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 2005The present study investigated the relation of compulsive hoarding to other obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) symptoms in a sample of 162 patients with OCD. Obsessions and compulsions reported on the Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule for DSM-IV were submitted to an exploratory factor analysis.
Jessica R, Grisham +3 more
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Compulsive Hoarding: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis
Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 2010Background:This project aimed to explore the experiences of people who compulsively hoard and how they make sense of their own hoarding behaviours.Method:A total of 11 compulsive hoarders were recruited and interviewed using a simple semi-structured interview format, designed for the purposes of the study.
Stephen, Kellett +3 more
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Neurobiology and Treatment of Compulsive Hoarding
CNS Spectrums, 2008AbstractCompulsive hoarding is a common and often disabling neuropsychiatric disorder. This article reviews the phenomenology, etiology, neurobiology, and treatment of compulsive hoarding. Compulsive hoarding is part of a discrete clinical syndrome that includes difficulty discarding, urges to save, clutter, excessive acquisition, indecisiveness ...
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A cognitive-behavioral model of compulsive hoarding
Behaviour Research and Therapy, 1996Compulsive hoarding is a little studied phenomenon within the research literature. The information available on compulsive hoarding is diverse and not well integrated. In the present article we propose a tentative cognitive-behavioral model of compulsive hoarding.
R O, Frost, T L, Hartl
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