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1  seems to be associated with the severity of compulsive behavior.
2 such as drug seeking, social withdrawal, and compulsive behavior.
3 anted electrodes and analyzed its effects on compulsive behavior.
4  behavioral inflexibility and other forms of compulsive behavior.
5 on, which has implications for understanding compulsive behavior.
6 nt interactions emerged primarily limited to compulsive behavior.
7 sconnection lesion led to both impulsive and compulsive behavior.
8 herefore, offers promise in the reduction of compulsive behavior.
9 ay be attributed to KOR-induced increases in compulsive behavior.
10 , a method commonly used to assess obsessive-compulsive behavior.
11 ocaine, and may reflect the establishment of compulsive behavior.
12 are often comorbid with the overlap based on compulsive behaviors.
13  glutamate transporter EAAC1 to the onset of compulsive behaviors.
14  (most notably nicotine addiction) and other compulsive behaviors.
15 ity is an endophenotype of vulnerability for compulsive behaviors.
16 right BNST were specifically correlated with compulsive behaviors.
17  beneficial target in treating SPD and other compulsive behaviors.
18  symptom domains: social, communication, and compulsive behaviors.
19  implicated in the pathogenesis of obsessive-compulsive behaviors.
20 hese mice also display highly repetitive and compulsive behaviors.
21  and with symptoms of obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors.
22 ve to be useful in the control of a range of compulsive behaviors.
23 itted in families exhibiting increased rigid-compulsive behaviors.
24  may accumulate in response to many types of compulsive behaviors.
25 tal-thalamic loops induce different types of compulsive behaviors.
26  be beneficial for decreasing stress-induced compulsive behaviors.
27 usive thoughts (obsessions) and ritualistic (compulsive) behaviors.
28 ined phenotypes included social interaction, compulsive behaviors, aggression, hyperactivity, anxiety
29 to the pathophysiology and treatment of both compulsive behavior and eating disorders.
30 sociated with a symptom dimension comprising compulsive behavior and intrusive thought.
31 autistic features, mood disorders, obsessive-compulsive behaviors and hetero- and autoaggression.
32 l as a transdiagnostic impairment underlying compulsive behaviors and representing a promising therap
33 omponent of the neuronal circuitry mediating compulsive behaviors and reward sensitivity.
34 nical research program with severe obsessive-compulsive behaviors and subthreshold symptoms of psycho
35 rallels between the emergence of repetitive, compulsive behaviors and the acquisition of automated be
36 evels of somatization, depression, obsessive-compulsive behavior, and anxiety.
37 viors, such as poor socialization, obsessive-compulsive behavior, and hyperactivity.
38 rbid difficulties, including tics, obsessive-compulsive behaviors, and attention deficit hyperactivit
39 gest synaptic adhesion as a key component in compulsive behaviors, and show that targeted sequencing
40 ered neuroplasticity associated with chronic compulsive behaviors, anxiety, or compensatory processes
41 Although patients with OCD report that these compulsive behaviors are unproductive and often senseles
42 t understanding highlights three elements of compulsive behavior as it applies to pathological overea
43 hich were also highly susceptible to develop compulsive behavior as measured in a SIP procedure.
44 of these changes are causally related to the compulsive behavior associated with drug addiction, and
45  functioning and quality of life, as well as compulsive behavior, but only subjects with OCD reported
46  OCPD are both impairing disorders marked by compulsive behaviors, but they can be differentiated by
47              Prominent theories suggest that compulsive behaviors, characteristic of obsessive-compul
48 ordered quantitative variation in social and compulsive behaviors established linkage to two loci for
49 an optogenetic approach to block repetitive, compulsive behavior in a mouse model in which deletion o
50 lation as a strategy to reduce impulsive and compulsive behavior in addiction.
51 between impulsivity and the development of a compulsive behavior in rats, which captures the hallmark
52 tes to individual vulnerability to impulsive-compulsive behavior in rats.
53                                        These compulsive behaviors included episodes of perseverance o
54  neurocomputational account of the nature of compulsive behaviors induced by dopaminergic drugs.
55                                              Compulsive behavior is a debilitating clinical feature o
56  the orbitofrontal cortex is associated with compulsive behaviors, its disruption may contribute to c
57 lness Scale; and scored at least moderate on compulsive behaviors measured with the Children's Yale-B
58 and scored moderate or more than moderate on compulsive behaviors measured with the modified Children
59 yses revealed a positive correlation between compulsive behavior (measured with the Repetitive Behavi
60 unction that may underlie the inflexible and compulsive behaviors present in psychiatric disorders.
61             Substance use as assessed by the Compulsive Behaviors Questionnaire.
62 e, withdrawal (physiological dependence), or compulsive behavior related to alcohol use.
63  control over stereotyped and repetitive and compulsive behaviors, respectively.
64 ptive processes to complementary facets of a compulsive behavior resulting from operant reward learni
65 asure of distress associated with preventing compulsive behaviors significantly correlated with TSPO
66 ages of onset, in locomotor and anxiety-like compulsive behaviors, spatial learning and memory, visua
67 biology of motivation might help in reducing compulsive behaviors such as drug addiction or eating di
68 re communication abnormalities and obsessive-compulsive behaviors than controls.
69 t of treatment in this study was repetitive, compulsive behavior that commonly occurs in persons with
70 uch cues also appear to trigger the harmful, compulsive behaviors that characterize addiction and oth
71  indeed the pathological process that drives compulsive behavior, then compulsivity should be apparen
72 In the marble-burying task, the anxiety-like compulsive behavior was normal in IDUA(-/-) mice at almo

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