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Journal Article

Citation

Cain AS, Bardone-Cone AM, Abramson LY, Vohs KD, Joiner TE. Int. J. Eat. Disord. 2008; 41(8): 713-721.

Affiliation

Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/eat.20563

PMID

18537167

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study investigated domain-specific (appearance, interpersonal, and academic) interactive relationships of perfectionism, self-efficacy, and stress to dieting and binge eating, positing that the level of weight/shape self-efficacy would be pivotal in identifying elevated dieting versus elevated binge eating.

METHOD: Participants were 406 randomly selected undergraduate women. At two time points (T1 and T2), 11 weeks apart, participants completed measures of dieting and binge eating attitudes/behaviors as well as domain-specific measures of perfectionism and self-efficacy (e.g., perfectionism related to appearance). Between T1 and T2, participants completed inventories weekly on the previous week's weight/shape, interpersonal, and academic stressors.

RESULTS: The combination of high interpersonal perfectionism, low interpersonal self-efficacy, high interpersonal stress, and high weight/shape self-efficacy was associated with the most elevated dieting. The hypothesized interactions related to the appearance and academic domains where not supported.

CONCLUSION: These results highlight the interpersonal context for dieting and the unique relationship between weight/shape self-efficacy and dieting.


Language: en

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