“…Despite the fact that weight‐related core beliefs are thought to automatically influence stimulus processing in ED (Vitousek & Hollon, ), many studies solely implement interview or self‐report questionnaires to assess information processing and body image‐related perceptions (see, e.g., Bulik, Sullivan, & Kendler, ; Coniglio et al, ; Dakanalis et al, ; Duarte, Pinto‐Gouveia, & Ferreira, ; Gall et al, ; Goldschmidt, Lavender, Hipwell, Stepp, & Keenan, ; Goldschmidt et al, ; Jensen & Steele, ; Loth, MacLehose, Bucchianeri, Crow, & Neumark‐Sztainer, ; Rohde, Stice, & Marti, ; Slane, Burt, & Klump, ; Stephen, Rose, Kenney, Rosselli‐Navarra, & Striegel Weissman, ; Troisi et al, ). While these methods allow for assessment of individuals' conscious belief systems, or “explicit processing", they are unable to access a person's unconscious attentional biases toward or away from specific stimuli, or “implicit processing” that may serve to drive and maintain ED psychopathology.…”