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Abstract:   (2910 Views)
Background: The present study was conducted to compare the neuropsychological and personality characteristics of depressed and obese patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder and normal people.
Method: For the purpose of applying the results, the research is an applied one. In terms of implementation, the research is causal-comparative. The statistical population of this study was all clients of psychiatry and psychiatry centers of Sari in 1397 which included three groups of depressed patients and patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder and healthy people. The groups were selected by screening questionnaire (Zohar-Feinberg) as well as a group of normal people without any mental disorders in order to control the effect of demographic factors of the normal group on the sex, age and education level with the matching groups of patients. Then, 45 people were selected by random sampling and randomly assigned into three groups of 15 people with depressive disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder and normal. Instruments used in this research were demographic, Benton's Observation Response Test (BVRT), Big Five Personality Test (NEO), and Beck Depression Test. Data were analyzed using SPSS 23 software.
 Results: The results showed that multiple comparisons of obsessive-compulsive disorder and depression using Tukey's post hoc test showed that the mean of neuropsychiatric and personality traits of people with obsessive-compulsive disorder and depressed patients with normal people were significantly different. The greatest difference between the mean of the behavioral brain in the obsessive-compulsive disorder is the behavioral inhibition system (BIS). There is a significant difference between the two groups in personality traits in neuroticism, so that obsessive compulsive patients have higher levels of neuroticism. There is a significant difference in the neuropsychological and personality characteristics of people with depressive disorder with normal people. In the subscales of behavioral inhibition system (BIS), FFS, Behavioral Activation System (BAS), Positive Excitement, Norouzizability, Extroversion, Experiency, Consistency, and Duty, among Depressed Disorder And normal people have a meaningful difference. The most significant difference in the behavioral activator system (BAS) is related to depression, and the behavioral inhibition system in depressed people varies with normal people.
Conclusion: The findings of this study showed that there is a significant difference in neuropsychiatric characteristics and personality traits between the three groups.
     
Type of Study: Original Research Article | Subject: Psychology

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