Dual-system models of cognition propose that the interplay between analytic and associative cognition determines emotions and behaviors. Scrupulosity, an OCD presentation dominated by religious or moral fears, involves fears that God is unreasonable and punitive, and previous research suggests that individuals with scrupulosity hold more negative concepts of God. The current research assessed if implicit associative aspects of these beliefs are relevant, both to bypass social desirability and to explore the role of non-conscious cognition. Participants were drawn from the Harvard Medical School Study on Judaism and Mental Health and completed an explicit assessment of beliefs about God, a related implicit association task (GNAT), and the Pe...
Recent theorists have argued that theistic cognitions are so deeply embedded in human cultures that ...
Believers in relational deities conceptualize god(s) as agents with mental states. The ability to im...
The empirical literature on the relationship between moral thought–action fusion (TAF) and obsessive...
Dual-system models of cognition propose that the interplay between analytic and associative cognitio...
Prior work has established that analytic thinking is associated with disbelief in God, whereas relig...
Individuals with scrupulosity prototypically have excessive religious fears or doubts about sin; how...
Scrupulosity is a phenomenon of the intersection between religiosity and obsessive-compulsive disord...
According to existing data, approximately 2.5% of the general population suffers from Obsessive Comp...
Objectives: Scrupulosity is a relatively common but understudied subtype of obsessive-compulsive dis...
The study examined the relationship between religion and symptoms of psychopathology, particularly o...
Individuals with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) seem to judge harm caused actively and passivel...
Research has widely demonstrated that religiosity is related to psychological well-being even in sit...
The current study examined scrupulosity in 352 unselected college students as measured by the 19-ite...
It has previously been suggested that the historically and geographically widespread persistence of ...
Scrupulosity, the obsessional fear of thinking or behaving immorally or against one\u27s religious b...
Recent theorists have argued that theistic cognitions are so deeply embedded in human cultures that ...
Believers in relational deities conceptualize god(s) as agents with mental states. The ability to im...
The empirical literature on the relationship between moral thought–action fusion (TAF) and obsessive...
Dual-system models of cognition propose that the interplay between analytic and associative cognitio...
Prior work has established that analytic thinking is associated with disbelief in God, whereas relig...
Individuals with scrupulosity prototypically have excessive religious fears or doubts about sin; how...
Scrupulosity is a phenomenon of the intersection between religiosity and obsessive-compulsive disord...
According to existing data, approximately 2.5% of the general population suffers from Obsessive Comp...
Objectives: Scrupulosity is a relatively common but understudied subtype of obsessive-compulsive dis...
The study examined the relationship between religion and symptoms of psychopathology, particularly o...
Individuals with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) seem to judge harm caused actively and passivel...
Research has widely demonstrated that religiosity is related to psychological well-being even in sit...
The current study examined scrupulosity in 352 unselected college students as measured by the 19-ite...
It has previously been suggested that the historically and geographically widespread persistence of ...
Scrupulosity, the obsessional fear of thinking or behaving immorally or against one\u27s religious b...
Recent theorists have argued that theistic cognitions are so deeply embedded in human cultures that ...
Believers in relational deities conceptualize god(s) as agents with mental states. The ability to im...
The empirical literature on the relationship between moral thought–action fusion (TAF) and obsessive...