Background
Psychological Domains Measured
Measures difficulty discarding items, excessive saving behaviors, attachment to possessions, and clutter-related distress.
Measures repeated checking behaviors, reassurance-seeking, and compulsive monitoring of safety-related concerns.
Measures distress related to symmetry, organization, arrangement, and the need for things to feel “just right.”
Measures repetitive counting rituals, number-related compulsions, and beliefs about specific numbers.
Measures contamination fears, excessive washing, cleaning rituals, and discomfort related to germs or contact with others.
Measures unwanted intrusive thoughts, mental compulsions, distressing images, and difficulty controlling repetitive thoughts.
Procedure
This questionnaire is designed to be completed by adults and adolescents based on their recent thoughts, compulsive behaviors, emotional experiences, and repetitive mental or behavioral patterns.
Participants select the response option that best describes how much each symptom or behavior has distressed or bothered them during recent functioning.
The assessment focuses on obsessive thoughts, compulsive rituals, checking behaviors, contamination fears, ordering needs, counting compulsions, and hoarding tendencies.
Participation
This assessment is intended for educational, screening, and research purposes only.
Results should not be considered a clinical diagnosis or substitute for professional psychological, psychiatric, or medical evaluation.
Individuals experiencing severe obsessive thoughts, compulsive rituals, emotional distress, anxiety, or major impairment in daily functioning are strongly encouraged to seek support from a qualified mental health professional.
Scoring & Interpretation
Responses are scored on a 0–4 scale according to symptom severity and emotional distress.
Higher scores generally indicate stronger obsessive-compulsive symptoms, compulsive rituals, intrusive thoughts, contamination fears, hoarding behaviors, and psychological distress.
The OCI-R contains six primary symptom dimensions:
- Hoarding
- Checking
- Ordering
- Counting
- Washing
- Obsessing
The OCI-R is commonly used as a screening tool to help identify individuals who may benefit from additional psychological or psychiatric evaluation.
Obsessive Compulsive Inventory - Revised (OCI-R) Questionnaire
Below is the Obsessive Compulsive Inventory - Revised (OCI-R), a digitally adapted 18- items self-assessment questionnaire. This assessment does not provide a clinical diagnosis, medical determination, or substitute for professional psychological evaluation.
Psychometric Norms
Current normative data for theCurrent normative data for the Obsessive Compulsive Inventory - Revised (OCI-R) are derived from 2 anonymous participant responses collected through TraitProfiler between 2026 and 2026. All response data are collected anonymously and are intended exclusively for educational, psychometric, and non-commercial research purposes.
Sources
- Foa, E. B., Huppert, J. D., Leiberg, S., Langner, R., Kichic, R., Hajcak, G., & Salkovskis, P. M. The Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory: Development and validation of a short version. Psychological assessment vol. 14,4 (2002)