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Compulsivity is measurable across distinct psychiatric symptom domains and is associated with familial risk and reward-related attentional capture.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Chamberlain, Samuel R  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7014-8121
Greenwood, Lisa-Marie 
Lee, Rico Sc 

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Compulsivity can be seen across various mental health conditions and refers to a tendency toward repetitive habitual acts that are persistent and functionally impairing. Compulsivity involves dysfunctional reward-related circuitry and is thought to be significantly heritable. Despite this, its measurement from a transdiagnostic perspective has received only scant research attention. Here we examine both the psychometric properties of a recently developed compulsivity scale, as well as its relationship with compulsive symptoms, familial risk, and reward-related attentional capture. METHODS: Two-hundred and sixty individuals participated in the study (mean age = 36.0 [SD = 10.8] years; 60.0% male) and completed the Cambridge-Chicago Compulsivity Trait Scale (CHI-T), along with measures of psychiatric symptoms and family history thereof. Participants also completed a task designed to measure reward-related attentional capture (n = 177). RESULTS: CHI-T total scores had a normal distribution and acceptable Cronbach's alpha (0.84). CHI-T total scores correlated significantly and positively (all p < 0.05, Bonferroni corrected) with Problematic Usage of the Internet, disordered gambling, obsessive-compulsive symptoms, alcohol misuse, and disordered eating. The scale was correlated significantly with history of addiction and obsessive-compulsive related disorders in first-degree relatives of participants and greater reward-related attentional capture. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that the CHI-T is suitable for use in online studies and constitutes a transdiagnostic marker for a range of compulsive symptoms, their familial loading, and related cognitive markers. Future work should more extensively investigate the scale in normative and clinical cohorts, and the role of value-modulated attentional capture across compulsive disorders.

Description

Keywords

Addiction, cognition., compulsive, marker, phenotype, Adult, Attention, Compulsive Behavior, Female, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Humans, Male, Medical History Taking, Psychometrics, Reward

Journal Title

CNS Spectr

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1092-8529
2165-6509

Volume Title

25

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (110049/Z/15/Z)