2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.eatbeh.2007.12.002
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Temperament, mood, dietary restraint, and bulimic symptomatology in college women

Abstract: The current study examined whether biologically-influenced temperamental traits implicated in the pathogenesis of disordered eating behaviors contribute to their development over and above current negative affect and dietary restraint. Participants (N=276) were undergraduate psychology women who completed the BULIT-R, BDI-II, STAIS, RS, and the MPQ. Temperamental characteristics, particularly increased Negative Emotionality and decreased Positive Emotionality, were significantly associated with increased level… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…As expected (Stice et al., 2010), participants with high restraint also had higher overall eating pathology (Table 1). In line with the literature, we also found more severe depressive symptoms in RE than URE (Ringham et al., 2008), and, despite normative weight being an inclusion criterion, we observed a higher BMI in RE, which typically correlates with RS scores (Adams et al., 2019). Furthermore, gender was distributed differently in RE than URE, with the RE group having a larger proportion of female participants.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…As expected (Stice et al., 2010), participants with high restraint also had higher overall eating pathology (Table 1). In line with the literature, we also found more severe depressive symptoms in RE than URE (Ringham et al., 2008), and, despite normative weight being an inclusion criterion, we observed a higher BMI in RE, which typically correlates with RS scores (Adams et al., 2019). Furthermore, gender was distributed differently in RE than URE, with the RE group having a larger proportion of female participants.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…As expected (Stice et al, 2010), participants with high restraint also had higher overall eating pathology (Table 1). Further in line with the literature, we found more severe depressive symptoms in RE than URE (Ringham et al, 2008), and, despite only inviting participants with normative weight as part of the inclusion criteria, we observed a higher BMI in RE, which indeed typically correlates with RS scores (Adams et al, 2019). Furthermore, gender was distributed differently in RE than URE, with the RE group having a larger proportion of female participants.…”
Section: Descriptivessupporting
confidence: 89%