K
Kathrin Schag
Researcher at University of Tübingen
Publications - 49
Citations - 1885
Kathrin Schag is an academic researcher from University of Tübingen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Binge eating & Impulsivity. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 31 publications receiving 1377 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Emotion regulation model in binge eating disorder and obesity--a systematic review.
Elisabeth J. Leehr,Kerstin Krohmer,Kathrin Schag,Thomas Dresler,Stephan Zipfel,Katrin Elisabeth Giel +5 more
TL;DR: Evidence is found indicating that negative emotion serves as a trigger for binge eating in the BED group unlike the obese group without BED, and for a (short-term) improvement of mood through food intake, irrespective of group.
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Food‐related impulsivity in obesity and Binge Eating Disorder – a systematic review
TL;DR: Evidence for the two components of impulsivity, specifically, the urge for appetitive stimuli and evidence for rash‐spontaneous behaviour, support the view that BED represents a specific phenotype of obesity with increased food‐related impulsivity.
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Food-Related Impulsivity in Obesity and Binge Eating Disorder—A Systematic Update of the Evidence
TL;DR: The synthesis of the latest evidence consolidates conclusions drawn in the initial systematic review that BED represents a distinct phenotype within the obesity spectrum that is characterized by increased impulsivity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Impulsivity in Binge Eating Disorder: Food Cues Elicit Increased Reward Responses and Disinhibition
Kathrin Schag,Martin Teufel,Florian Junne,Hubert Preissl,Martin Hautzinger,Stephan Zipfel,Katrin Elisabeth Giel +6 more
TL;DR: Food-related reward sensitivity and rash-spontaneous behaviour, as the two components of impulsivity, are increased in BED in comparison with weight-matched and normal-weight controls, indicating that BED represents a neurobehavioural phenotype of obesity that is characterised by increased impulsivity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Inhibitory control and decision making under risk in bulimia nervosa and binge‐eating disorder
Mudan Wu,Katrin Elisabeth Giel,Mandy Skunde,Kathrin Schag,Gottfried Rudofsky,Martina de Zwaan,Stephan Zipfel,Wolfgang Herzog,Hans-Christoph Friederich +8 more
TL;DR: BN but not BED patients differed from their respective control groups concerning the "stopping" component of impulsivity, which may contribute to the behavioral distinctions in binge-eating behavior between BN and BED.