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1 houghts (obsessions) and repetitive actions (compulsions).
2 es (obsessions) and by repetitive behaviors (compulsions).
3  the percentage change of these bands during compulsion.
4 ism may underlie diverse disorders involving compulsion.
5 rtant for developing interventions to reduce compulsion.
6 d not control malaria; its use required mass compulsion.
7 -predicting stimuli, which may contribute to compulsion.
8 mma oscillations were highly correlated with compulsion.
9 ases with prominent distress when preventing compulsions.
10 gers, and the intent of ERP is to extinguish compulsions.
11 triggers but prevented from expressing their compulsions.
12 on, and 4) hoarding: hoarding obsessions and compulsions.
13 te disinhibition and apathy, and may exhibit compulsions.
14  are more specific to the phenotype than are compulsions.
15 ssions and repeating, ordering, and counting compulsions; 2) forbidden thoughts: aggression, sexual,
16 ng disturbances (80%), hypersexuality (43%), compulsions (29%), and depressed mood (48%).
17 ligious, and somatic obsessions and checking compulsions, 3) cleaning: cleaning and contamination, an
18 der had a higher rate of both obsessions and compulsions, an earlier age at onset, and more comorbid
19  characteristics on the associations between compulsion and disengagement.
20 l real-time neurophysiological biomarkers of compulsion and warrant further assessment of the use of
21  underlying neurophysiological mechanisms of compulsion and warrants further assessment of the use of
22  people in the community have obsessions and compulsions and associated levels of interference.
23                                 Because both compulsions and cocaine-induced behaviors may represent
24               The presence of obsessions and compulsions and mental disorders was assessed using the
25  reduced binge-eating-related obsessions and compulsions, and SGAs reduced symptoms of depression (MD
26  (LFP) signals in this area during obsession/compulsion are lacking.
27                                         Many compulsions are an attempt to avoid perceived dangers, a
28                               Obsessions and compulsions are common in the adult population, have the
29 that patients know that their obsessions and compulsions are excessive, but their symptoms neverthele
30 caine, suggests that cortical-limbic induced compulsions are significantly different in their origin
31 king rituals, and the need to perform mental compulsions before discarding any item.
32 evaluated for the presence of obsessions and compulsions by means of the Structured Clinical Intervie
33                      These data suggest that compulsions can be triggered not by impaired cortical-li
34 asses: unaffected (class 1), ritual/symmetry compulsions (class 2), germ/contamination obsessions (cl
35 ted behaviors suggest that the expression of compulsions could in part involve loss of control of suc
36 ives had higher rates of both obsessions and compulsions; however, this finding is more robust for ob
37 Levels of discontinuity were associated with compulsion (IDR 0.973 [95% CI 0.96-0.99, p<0.0001].
38  reform agenda which could mark a new era of compulsion in international trade law.
39 gories used to group types of obsessions and compulsions in the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale
40 genic mouse model of cortical-limbic induced compulsions in which dopamine D1 receptor-expressing (D1
41     We identified no evidence that increased compulsion leads to improved readmission outcomes or to
42 ens core (NAcore) are critical for promoting compulsion-like alcohol drinking, where rats consume alc
43 ination, or responsiveness facilitates their compulsion-like behavior.
44 ing (rather than potentiation) of D1CT mouse compulsion-like behaviors by cocaine, suggests that cort
45 ted, the incidence of D1CT transgene-induced compulsion-like behaviors such as repeated leaping and p
46 of the transition from social consumption to compulsion-like seeking during relapse.
47 not found in other parts of the brain during compulsion, or in the BNST during noncompulsive behavior
48 ysthymia, anxiety, panic, phobia, obsession, compulsion, posttraumatic, care management, case managem
49 ems and the presence of other obsessions and compulsions related to their hoarding, such as fear of c
50 ring, arranging, counting, writing-rewriting compulsions, repetitive writing tics) and disinhibition
51 uggest that the motor circuits stimulated in compulsions represent only a subset of the parallel circ
52 and decreased during the initiation phase of compulsion, respectively, whereas beta increased after c
53 and decreased during the initiation phase of compulsion, respectively, whereas beta increased after c
54 7-positive patients had significantly higher compulsion scores than D8/17-negative patients.
55 ts with autism and may serve as a marker for compulsion severity within autism.
56                   Subclinical obsessions and compulsions should be taken into account in research, in
57 , respectively, whereas beta increased after compulsion stopped.
58 , respectively, whereas beta increased after compulsion stopped.
59  behaviors, according to both the Yale-Brown compulsion subscale and CGI rating of obsessive-compulsi
60  Repetitive behaviors were measured with the compulsion subscale of the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsi
61 oral abnormalities uniquely resembling human compulsions, such as non-aggressive biting of cagemates
62 lsive disorder (OCD) involves obsessions and compulsions that cause impairment and distress, and whic
63 is characterized by recurrent obsessions and compulsions that create distress and interfere with dail
64 cluding generalized anxiety, depression, and compulsions that preceded the birth of their children.
65  cognitive distortions: 1) dichotomania, the compulsion to perceive quantities as dichotomous even wh
66             Alcoholism is characterized by a compulsion to seek and ingest alcohol, loss of control o
67 onically relapsing disorder characterized by compulsion to seek and take drugs and has been linked to
68 ically relapsing disorder characterized by a compulsion to seek and take drugs and the development of
69 ically relapsing disorder characterized by a compulsion to seek and take drugs, the development of de
70                           Longer duration of compulsion was associated with later disengagement (HR 0
71 ical stimulation, in terms of suppression of compulsion, was significantly correlated with the percen
72 y aggressive and shameful thoughts), but not compulsions, was associated with help-seeking.
73                                              Compulsions were assessed with the Yale-Brown Obsessive
74                               Obsessions and compulsions were frequent in individuals with mental dis
75  understand the mechanisms of addictions and compulsions, which involve a failure of aversive outcome
76 nd upper limits, respectively, of a cocaine "compulsion zone".

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