Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"disgust" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Obsessive-compulsive symptoms moderate the effect of contamination motion on disgust intensity Pelzer M; Ouellet-Courtois C; Krause S; Coughtrey A; Fink-Lamotte J; 40858003
CCRH
2 Can immorality be contracted? Appraisals of moral disgust and contamination fear Ouellet-Courtois C; Radomsky AS; 37270955
PSYCHOLOGY
3 The unsanitary other and racism during the pandemic: analysis of purity discourses on social media in India, France and United States of America during the COVID-19 pandemic Desmarais C; Roy M; Nguyen MT; Venkatesh V; Rousseau C; 36861381
CONCORDIA

 

Title:Can immorality be contracted? Appraisals of moral disgust and contamination fear
Authors:Ouellet-Courtois CRadomsky AS
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37270955/
DOI:10.1016/j.brat.2023.104336
Publication:Behaviour research and therapy
Keywords:Contamination fearMental contaminationMoral disgustObsessive-compulsive disorder
PMID:37270955 Category: Date Added:2023-06-05
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY

Description:

While extant research underlines the role of disgust in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) with contamination fear, less research attention has been devoted to moral disgust. This study endeavored to examine the types of appraisals that are elicited by moral disgust in comparison to core disgust, and to examine their associations with both contact and mental contamination symptoms. In a within-participants design, 148 undergraduate students were exposed to core disgust, moral disgust, and anxiety control elicitors via vignettes, and provided appraisal ratings of sympathetic magic, thought-action fusion and mental contamination, as well as compulsive urges. Measures of both contact and mental contamination symptoms were administered. Mixed modeling analyses indicated that core disgust and moral disgust elicitors both provoked greater appraisals of sympathetic magic and compulsive urges than anxiety control elicitors. Further, moral disgust elicitors elicited greater thought-action fusion and mental contamination appraisals than all other elicitors. Overall, these effects were greater in those with higher contamination fear. This study demonstrates how a range of contagion beliefs are evoked by the presence of 'moral contaminants', and that such beliefs are positively associated with contamination concerns. These results shed light on moral disgust as an important target in the treatment of contamination fear.





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