1995
DOI: 10.1016/0191-8869(94)00192-u
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Positive and negative perfectionism

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Cited by 368 publications
(283 citation statements)
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“…Perfectionism was conceptualized in terms of perceived consequences, and this conceptualization was modeled after the behavioral principles of positive and negative reinforcement (Terry-Short, Owens, Slade, & Dewey, 1995). There was evidence that marathon runners displayed similar levels of perfectionism as those seen in individuals with eating disorders, but levels of dissatisfaction that were comparable to normal controls.…”
Section: Theoretical Debatementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Perfectionism was conceptualized in terms of perceived consequences, and this conceptualization was modeled after the behavioral principles of positive and negative reinforcement (Terry-Short, Owens, Slade, & Dewey, 1995). There was evidence that marathon runners displayed similar levels of perfectionism as those seen in individuals with eating disorders, but levels of dissatisfaction that were comparable to normal controls.…”
Section: Theoretical Debatementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further studies using the Positive and Negative Perfectionism Scale (PANPS; Terry-Short, Owens, Slade, & Dewey, 1995) to capture perfectionistic strivings (positive perfectionism) versus perfectionistic concerns (negative perfectionism) often find negative perfectionism to show larger and more consistently positive relationships with eating disorder symptoms than positive perfectionism (e.g., Haase, Prapavessis, & Owens, 1999 with some studies finding positive perfectionism to show negative relationships with eating disorder symptoms PHYSICAL APPEARANCE PERFECTIONISM 4 when the overlap with negative perfectionism is statistically controlled for (e.g., Chan & Owens, 2006;Choo & Chan, 2013). Whether the findings can be interpreted as evidence for perfectionistic strivings and perfectionistic concerns showing different relationships with eating disorder symptoms is unclear, however.…”
Section: Perfectionism Dimensionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The reason is that the PANPS has shown problems with content validity and factorial validity. As regards content validity, the PANPS was designed to capture positive and negative consequences of perfectionism (Terry-Short et al, 1995) following Slade and Owens' (1998) dual process model of perfectionism based on reinforcement theory.…”
Section: Perfectionism Dimensionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the one hand, there is the dimension of perfectionistic strivings, representing striving for perfection and high personal standards for performance. This dimension has also been described as adaptive, healthy, or positive perfectionism (see Rice et al, 1998;Stumpf & Parker, 2000;Terry-Short et al, 1995).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%