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Nicholas Maltby

Researcher at Hartford Hospital

Publications -  16
Citations -  1567

Nicholas Maltby is an academic researcher from Hartford Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety disorder & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 16 publications receiving 1475 citations. Previous affiliations of Nicholas Maltby include University of Connecticut.

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Dysfunctional action monitoring hyperactivates frontal–striatal circuits in obsessive–compulsive disorder: an event-related fMRI study

TL;DR: Results suggest that correctly rejected, high-conflict trials that require response inhibition may provide a better model than error trials of compulsive behaviors in OCD.
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Are "obsessive" beliefs specific to OCD?: a comparison across anxiety disorders.

TL;DR: Compared to NCCs and ACs, OCD patients more strongly endorsed beliefs related to threat estimation, tolerance of uncertainty, importance and control of thoughts, and perfectionism, but not inflated responsibility.
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Cognitive-behavioral therapy for medication nonresponders with obsessive-compulsive disorder: a wait-list-controlled open trial.

TL;DR: CBT is a useful treatment for OCD patients who have failed to respond adequately to multiple serotonin reuptake inhibitor medications, however, these results were attenuated compared with previous trials.
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A Brief Motivational Intervention for Treatment‐Refusing OCD Patients

TL;DR: A brief, 4‐session readiness intervention (RI) designed to decrease ERP refusal among patients with OCD is described, and ERP following RI was associated with a high drop‐out rate, a figure that exceeds that typically seen in OCD treatment studies.
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An exploratory study of the neural mechanisms of decision making in compulsive hoarding.

TL;DR: These results provide partial support for an emerging model of compulsive hoarding based on complications of the decision-making process and suggest that compulsiveHoarding may be characterized by focal deficits in the processing of reward and changes in reward contingencies, particularly when these are perceived to be punishing.