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        Mapping Compulsivity in the DSM-5 Obsessive Compulsive and Related Disorders : Cognitive Domains, Neural Circuitry, and Treatment

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        Author
        Fineberg, Naomi A.
        Apergis-Schoute, Annemieke M.
        Vaghi, Matilde M.
        Banca, Paula
        Gillan, Claire M.
        Voon, Valerie
        Chamberlain, Samuel R.
        Cinosi, Eduardo
        Reid, Jemma
        Shahper, Sonia
        Bullmore, Edward T.
        Sahakian, Barbara J.
        Robbins, Trevor W.
        Attention
        2299/20847
        Abstract
        Compulsions are repetitive, stereotyped thoughts and behaviors designed to reduce harm. Growing evidence suggests that the neurocognitive mechanisms mediating behavioral inhibition (motor inhibition, cognitive inflexibility) reversal learning and habit formation (shift from goal-directed to habitual responding) contribute toward compulsive activity in a broad range of disorders. In obsessive compulsive disorder, distributed network perturbation appears focused around the prefrontal cortex, caudate, putamen, and associated neuro-circuitry. Obsessive compulsive disorder-related attentional set-shifting deficits correlated with reduced resting state functional connectivity between the dorsal caudate and the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex on neuroimaging. In contrast, experimental provocation of obsessive compulsive disorder symptoms reduced neural activation in brain regions implicated in goal-directed behavioral control (ventromedial prefrontal cortex, caudate) with concordant increased activation in regions implicated in habit learning (presupplementary motor area, putamen). The ventromedial prefrontal cortex plays a multifaceted role, integrating affective evaluative processes, flexible behavior, and fear learning. Findings from a neuroimaging study of Pavlovian fear reversal, in which obsessive compulsive disorder patients failed to flexibly update fear responses despite normal initial fear conditioning, suggest there is an absence of ventromedial prefrontal cortex safety signaling in obsessive compulsive disorder, which potentially undermines explicit contingency knowledge and may help to explain the link between cognitive inflexibility, fear, and anxiety processing in compulsive disorders such as obsessive compulsive disorder.
        Publication date
        2018-01-01
        Published in
        International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology
        Published version
        https://doi.org/10.1093/ijnp/pyx088
        Other links
        http://hdl.handle.net/2299/20847
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