AI Article Synopsis

  • Compulsive behavior is driven by the belief that specific actions can prevent negative future events, even though these actions have no actual impact on the outcomes.
  • The study involved 514 healthy participants who completed self-reports on compulsivity and took part in a reinforcement-learning task, revealing a strong link between compulsive tendencies and "outcome-irrelevant learning," where individuals assigned value to factors that don’t influence results.
  • These findings suggest that learning processes unrelated to outcomes may play a role in compulsive behaviors and highlight the need for more research into how false action-outcome associations contribute to these behaviors.

Article Abstract

Compulsive behavior is enacted under a belief that a specific act controls the likelihood of an undesired future event. Compulsive behaviors are widespread in the general population despite having no causal relationship with events they aspire to influence. In the current study, we tested whether there is an increased tendency to assign value to aspects of a task that do not predict an outcome (i.e., outcome-irrelevant learning) among individuals with compulsive tendencies. We studied 514 healthy individuals who completed self-report compulsivity, anxiety, depression, and schizotypal measurements, and a well-established reinforcement-learning task (i.e., the two-step task). As expected, we found a positive relationship between compulsivity and outcome-irrelevant learning. Specifically, individuals who reported having stronger compulsive tendencies (e.g., washing, checking, grooming) also tended to assign value to response keys and stimuli locations that did not predict an outcome. Controlling for overall goal-directed abilities and the co-occurrence of anxious, depressive, or schizotypal tendencies did not impact these associations. These findings indicate that outcome-irrelevant learning processes may contribute to the expression of compulsivity in a general population setting. We highlight the need for future research on the formation of non-veridical action-outcome associations as a factor related to the occurrence and maintenance of compulsive behavior.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8571313PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41398-021-01642-xDOI Listing

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