Habit Learning in OCD: Preliminary Data from a Spanish Sample
M. Prime Tous, C. Lopez Solà, L. Hermida, M. A. Fullana

TL;DR
This study explores habit learning in unmedicated individuals with OCD, finding altered learning patterns compared to healthy controls.
Contribution
The study provides preliminary evidence of habit learning differences in unmedicated OCD patients using the Slips-of-Action Task.
Findings
Unmedicated OCD individuals showed significantly lower Devaluation Sensitivity Index (DSI) compared to healthy controls.
Post hoc analysis revealed superior habit learning in adult healthy controls compared to youth OCD participants.
Abstract
Instrumental learning involves goal-directed and habitual systems. The Slips-of-Action Task (SOAT) is extensively used to measure habit tendencies and the likelihood of making erroneous responses for devalued outcomes. The SOAT provides a Devaluation Sensitivity Index (DSI), a measure of the balance between relative goal-directed and habitual learning. Individuals with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) often engage in repetitive actions, suggesting a potential deficit in goal-directed control and an increased reliance on habitual learning. Previous literature has shown that medicated OCD adults performed worse on the SOAT task than healthy controls. To compare habit learning performance in an unmedicated sample: Goal 1: Between OCD and Healthy Controls (HC) Goal 2: Across four groups: adult OCD, adult HC, children OCD, and children HC Goal 1: Between OCD and Healthy Controls (HC)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders · Behavioral and Psychological Studies · Gambling Behavior and Treatments
