All Stories

  1. The development and validation of the Beliefs About Losing Control Inventory (BALCI)
  2. From the laboratory to the clinic (and back again): How experiments have informed cognitive–behavior therapy for obsessive–compulsive disorder
  3. An informational pathway to the development of a contamination-related memory bias
  4. Introduction: A global perspective on unwanted intrusive thoughts
  5. Part 3. A question of perspective: The association between intrusive thoughts and obsessionality in 11 countries
  6. Part 2. They scare because we care: The relationship between obsessive intrusive thoughts and appraisals and control strategies across 15 cities
  7. Part 1—You can run but you can't hide: Intrusive thoughts on six continents
  8. The nature and assessment of mental contamination: A psychometric analysis
  9. Further Support for the Acceptability-Enhancing Roles of Safety Behavior and a Cognitive Rationale in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Anxiety Disorders
  10. Safety Behaviour Enhances the Acceptability of Exposure
  11. Advances in the Cognitive Behavioural Treatment of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
  12. Diminished confidence in prospective memory causes doubts and urges to check
  13. Fear of self and obsessionality: Development and validation of the Fear of Self Questionnaire
  14. Beliefs about control and the persistence of cleaning behaviour: An experimental analysis
  15. Meaning and mental contamination: Focus on appraisals
  16. Incorporating the Judicious Use of Safety Behavior Into Exposure-Based Treatments for Anxiety Disorders: A Study of Treatment Acceptability
  17. Interrelationships between spider fear associations, attentional disengagement and self-reported fear: A preliminary test of a dual-systems model
  18. Interpretive style and intolerance of uncertainty in individuals with anxiety disorders: A focus on generalized anxiety disorder
  19. Well that changes everything! The genesis of memory bias for threat with implications for delayed onset in anxiety disorders
  20. Keep Your Eye on the Target: Safety Behavior Reduces Targeted Threat Beliefs Following a Behavioral Experiment
  21. Mental contamination: The effects of imagined physical dirt and immoral behaviour
  22. Mental contamination: The perpetrator effect
  23. Reducing contamination by exposure plus safety behaviour
  24. Information Processing in Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and Related Problems
  25. Review of Handbook of implicit social cognition: Measurement, theory, and applications.
  26. An Experimental Investigation of Factors Involved in Excessive Reassurance Seeking: The Effects of Perceived Threat, Responsibility and Ambiguity on Compulsive Urges and Anxiety
  27. Believe in yourself: Manipulating beliefs about memory causes checking
  28. Don’t even think about checking: Mental checking causes memory distrust
  29. Review of Disgust and its disorders: Theory, assessment, and treatment implications.
  30. Experimental Manipulation of Beliefs about Uncertainty: Effects on Interpretive Processing and Access to Threat Schemata
  31. Cognitive-Behavior Therapy for Compulsive Checking in OCD
  32. Why do people seek reassurance and check repeatedly? An investigation of factors involved in compulsive behavior in OCD and depression
  33. Memory for Physiological Feedback in Social Anxiety Disorder: The Role of Fear of Bodily Sensations
  34. Analyses of mental contamination: Part II, individual differences
  35. Analyses of mental contamination: Part I, experimental manipulations of morality
  36. Interpretations of and memory for bodily sensations during public speaking
  37. Review of Effective writing in psychology: Papers, posters, and presentations.
  38. Separating hoarding from OCD
  39. Safety behaviour does not necessarily interfere with exposure therapy
  40. Specificity of belief domains in OCD: Validation of the French version of the Obsessive Beliefs Questionnaire and a comparison across samples
  41. Inferential confusion, obsessive beliefs and obsessive–compulsive symptoms: a multidimensional investigation of cognitive domains
  42. Safety behaviour: A reconsideration
  43. Attentional Focus During Repeated Checking Influences Memory but not Metamemory
  44. Doubting and Compulsive Checking
  45. Psychometric Properties of the French and English Versions of the Vancouver Obsessional‐Compulsive Inventory and the Symmetry Ordering and Arranging Questionnaire
  46. Exploring the boundaries of memory distrust from repeated checking: Increasing external validity and examining thresholds
  47. Repeated checking really does cause memory distrust
  48. Interpersonal Aspects of Responsibility and Obsessive Compulsive Symptoms
  49. Psychometric properties of the French and English versions of the Social Phobia Inventory.
  50. Psychometric properties of the French and English versions of the Claustrophobia Questionnaire (CLQ)
  51. Subtyping OCD: Prospects and problems
  52. The Vancouver Obsessional Compulsive Inventory (VOCI)
  53. A critical evaluation of obsessive–compulsive disorder subtypes: Symptoms versus mechanisms
  54. Introduction to the special issue, “Experimental approaches to understanding OCD”
  55. The importance of importance in OCD memory research
  56. Review of Treatment Planning in Psychotherapy: Taking the Guesswork Out of Clinical Care.
  57. Connections among symptoms of obsessive–compulsive disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder: a case series
  58. Predictors of Psychological Well-Being in a Diverse Sample of HIV-Positive Patients Receiving Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy
  59. Thought–shape fusion in anorexia nervosa: an experimental investigation
  60. Panic termination and the post-panic period
  61. COGNITIVE-BEHAVIORAL THERAPY FOR SOCIAL ANXIETY DISORDER
  62. Memory bias, confidence and responsibility in compulsive checking
  63. The Claustrophobia Questionnaire
  64. Memory bias in obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD)
  65. Why Do Episodes of Panic Stop?
  66. Treating Comorbid Presentations: Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and Disorders of Impulse Control.