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Caroline Braet

Researcher at Ghent University

Publications -  319
Citations -  10522

Caroline Braet is an academic researcher from Ghent University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Overweight & Eating disorders. The author has an hindex of 52, co-authored 302 publications receiving 9429 citations. Previous affiliations of Caroline Braet include Ghent University Hospital.

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Effortful control as a moderator in the association between punishment and reward sensitivity and eating styles in adolescent boys and girls

TL;DR: There was some evidence for interactions between reactive and regulative traits in explaining restrained and emotional eating in girls and several main effects of SP and SR were found in boys for all eating styles and in girls for restrained eating.
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Children's attentional exploration of threatening information as related to trust in maternal support.

TL;DR: Results suggest that, in the presence of mother, children with more secure attachment expectations are better able to freely explore a mildly threatening environment.
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Assessing Emotional and Behavioural Problems with the Child Behaviour Checklist: Exploring the Relevance of Adjusting the Norms for the Flemish Community

TL;DR: In this article, the psychometric properties of the CBCL 2001-version and the usefulness of existing US norms within a Flemish community sample were explored, and significant differences were found when comparing the mean CBCL raw scores of the different subsamples (for different ages and gender groups) with the US norms.
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Training adaptive emotion regulation skills in early adolescents : the effects of distraction, acceptance, cognitive reappraisal, and problem solving

TL;DR: In this article, the immediate and prolonged effects of training emotion regulation (ER) in 256 young adolescents (9-13 years) were investigated, and four experimental conditions in which an ER skill (acceptance, distraction, cognitive reappraisal, and problem solving) was trained were compared with two control conditions (rumination, performing a cognitive task).
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Testing the dual pathway model of ADHD in obesity: a pilot study.

TL;DR: Not obesity alone but obesity with binge eating was specifically associated with a mechanism often reported in ADHD, namely delay discounting, however, this effect may be more driven by inattention.