Musical Obsessions: A Comprehensive Review of Neglected Clinical Phenomena
Document Type
Article
Disciplines
Psychology | Social and Behavioral Sciences
Abstract
Intrusive musical imagery (IMI) consists of involuntarily recalled, short, looping fragments of melodies. Musical obsessions are distressing, impairing forms of IMI that merit investigation in their own right and, more generally, research into these phenomena may broaden our understanding of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), which is phenomenologically and etiologically heterogeneous. We present the first comprehensive review of musical obsessions, based on the largest set of case descriptions ever assembled (N = 96). Characteristics of musical obsessions are described and compared with normal IMI, musical hallucinations, and visual obsessional imagery. Assessment, differential diagnosis, comorbidity, etiologic hypotheses, and treatments are described. Musical obsessions may be under-diagnosed because they are not adequately assessed by current measures of OCD. Musical obsessions have been misdiagnosed as psychotic phenomena, which has led to ineffective treatment. Accurate diagnosis is important for appropriate treatment. Musical obsessions may respond to treatments that are not recommended for prototypic OCD symptoms.
Article Number
1417
Publication Date
2014
Language
English
Recommended Citation
Taylor, Steven; McKay, Dean; Miguel, Euripedes; De Mathis, Maria; Andrade, Chittaranjan; Ahuja, Niraj; Sookman, Debbie; Kwon, Jun Soo; Huh, Min Jung; Riemann, Bradley; Cottraux, Jean; O'Connor, Kieron; Hale, Lisa; Abramowitz, Jonathan; Fontenelle, Leonardo; and Storch, Eric, "Musical Obsessions: A Comprehensive Review of Neglected Clinical Phenomena" (2014). Psychology Faculty Publications. 297.
https://research.library.fordham.edu/psych_facultypubs/297
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