Implicit self-esteem in bulimia nervosa
Implicit self-esteem in bulimia nervosa
Implicit and explicit self-esteem were compared in a group of female participants with bulimia nervosa or binge eating disorder (n = 20) and a healthy control group (n = 20). Lower explicit and a less positive implicit self-esteem bias in the clinical group was predicted. Participants completed a self-esteem implicit association test and two explicit self-esteem measures. The eating disordered group had lower explicit self-esteem, but a more positive implicit self-esteem bias than controls. The results are discussed in relation to the idea that discrepancies between implicit and explicit self-esteem reflect fragile self-esteem and are related to high levels of perfectionism, which is associated with eating disorders.
implicit self-esteem, bulimia nervosa, cognitive models
265-273
Cockerham, Elaine
3825b318-be01-4dba-b715-7b2d0c87536b
Stopa, Lusia
b52f29fc-d1c2-450d-b321-68f95fa22c40
Bell, Lorraine
8842a426-0a9d-45c0-81d8-6bbd552b7548
Gregg, Aiden P.
1b03bb58-b3a5-4852-a177-29e4f633b063
June 2009
Cockerham, Elaine
3825b318-be01-4dba-b715-7b2d0c87536b
Stopa, Lusia
b52f29fc-d1c2-450d-b321-68f95fa22c40
Bell, Lorraine
8842a426-0a9d-45c0-81d8-6bbd552b7548
Gregg, Aiden P.
1b03bb58-b3a5-4852-a177-29e4f633b063
Cockerham, Elaine, Stopa, Lusia, Bell, Lorraine and Gregg, Aiden P.
(2009)
Implicit self-esteem in bulimia nervosa.
Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 40 (2), .
(doi:10.1016/j.jbtep.2008.12.003).
Abstract
Implicit and explicit self-esteem were compared in a group of female participants with bulimia nervosa or binge eating disorder (n = 20) and a healthy control group (n = 20). Lower explicit and a less positive implicit self-esteem bias in the clinical group was predicted. Participants completed a self-esteem implicit association test and two explicit self-esteem measures. The eating disordered group had lower explicit self-esteem, but a more positive implicit self-esteem bias than controls. The results are discussed in relation to the idea that discrepancies between implicit and explicit self-esteem reflect fragile self-esteem and are related to high levels of perfectionism, which is associated with eating disorders.
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Published date: June 2009
Keywords:
implicit self-esteem, bulimia nervosa, cognitive models
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Local EPrints ID: 156595
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/156595
ISSN: 0005-7916
PURE UUID: 3a41ec5f-7d4a-47b9-84af-e6f3b5379165
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Date deposited: 01 Jun 2010 15:44
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 01:44
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Author:
Elaine Cockerham
Author:
Lorraine Bell
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