2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.appet.2015.04.064
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Temperamental factors in severe weight cycling. A cross-sectional study

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Cited by 18 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
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“…However, when comparing the BIS/BAS means of the present samples with those from an earlier population‐based study (Müller et al , ), it appears that our patients did not score substantially higher or lower on the BIS/BAS scales compared with individuals from the community. Furthermore, BIS/BAS and EC scores did not differ substantially from data reported in earlier studies in bariatric surgery candidates (Müller et al , ; Müller et al , ) or in overweight/obese individuals from the German population (de Zwaan, Engeli, & Müller, ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 37%
“…However, when comparing the BIS/BAS means of the present samples with those from an earlier population‐based study (Müller et al , ), it appears that our patients did not score substantially higher or lower on the BIS/BAS scales compared with individuals from the community. Furthermore, BIS/BAS and EC scores did not differ substantially from data reported in earlier studies in bariatric surgery candidates (Müller et al , ; Müller et al , ) or in overweight/obese individuals from the German population (de Zwaan, Engeli, & Müller, ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 37%
“…Zwaan et al [67] investigated the association between reactive and regulative aspects of temperament and severe weight cycling in overweight and obese individuals. They found that higher reward sensitivity/BAS was associated with more severe weight cycling, but no association or moderating effect with EC was found.…”
Section: Ec and Edmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, binge-eating behavior is associated with psychosocial factors such as negative affect and mood dysregulation (Micanti et al, 2016), weight cycling (Zwaan, Engeli, & Muller, 2015), body dissatisfaction (Goldschmidt, Wall, Choo, Becker, & Neumark-Sztainer, 2016), fear of self-compassion (Kelly, Vimalakanthan, & Carter, 2014), and neuroticism (Womble et al, 2001). Individuals who are underweight or normal weight report lower food consumption when experiencing negative emotions than when experiencing positive emotions.…”
Section: Factors That Lead To the Formation Of Famentioning
confidence: 99%