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Journal ArticleDOI

Clarifying the role of impulsivity in bulimia nervosa.

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TLDR
It is suggested that future researchers assess urgency, not lack of planning, when assessing impulsivity as a risk factor for bulimic symptoms, as well as the tendency to act rashly when experiencing negative affect.
Abstract
Objective With the goal of demonstrating that urgency impulsivity is associated with bulimic symptoms, not (lack of) planning impulsivity, the authors conducted two studies assessing these personality traits and bulimic symptoms in undergraduate women. Method In study 1 291 women completed urgency and deliberation scales of the NEO PIR and the BULIT-R. In study 2 101 women completed alternative measures tapping these personality constructs and the BULIT-R. Results In both studies, what is commonly assessed with impulsivity measures, a lack of planning, was not significantly associated with bulimic symptoms. However, urgency, the tendency to act rashly when experiencing negative affect, was positively correlated with bulimic symptoms. Discussion The authors suggest that future researchers assess urgency, not lack of planning, when assessing impulsivity as a risk factor for bulimia nervosa. © 2003 by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Eat Disord 33: 406–411, 2003.

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Citations
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Using Self-Report Assessment Methods to Explore Facets of Mindfulness

TL;DR: Mindfulness facets were shown to be differentially correlated in expected ways with several other constructs and to have incremental validity in the prediction of psychological symptoms.
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Solving the puzzle of deliberate self-harm: the experiential avoidance model.

TL;DR: The purpose of the present paper is to outline a framework-the Experiential Avoidance Model (EAM) of DSH, which integrates a variety of research on emotions, experiential avoidance, and DSH within a clinically useful framework that sparks novel research directions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Integration of impulsivity and positive mood to predict risky behavior: Development and validation of a measure of positive urgency.

TL;DR: The authors confirmed the hypothesis that positive urgency differentiated alcoholics from both eating-disordered and control individuals and explained variance in risky behavior not explained by measures of other impulsivity-like constructs.
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The role of impulsivity in the development of substance use and eating disorders

TL;DR: The evidence supporting the existence of two dimensions of impulsivity, reflecting one of the primary dimensions of Gray's personality theory, and rash-spontaneous impulsiveness are reviewed in relation to substance misuse and binge eating.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emotion-based dispositions to rash action: positive and negative urgency.

TL;DR: Evidence is presented for the existence of 2 related traits called positive andnegative urgency, which refer to individual differences in the disposition to engage in rash action when experiencing extreme positive and negative affect, respectively.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Five Factor Model and impulsivity: using a structural model of personality to understand impulsivity

TL;DR: The UPPS Impulsive Behavior Scale as mentioned in this paper was developed to identify four distinct personality facets associated with impulsive-like behavior which were labeled urgency, lack of premeditation, pre-emption, and perseverance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Binge eating as escape from self-awareness.

TL;DR: It is proposed that binge eating is motivated by a desire to escape from self-awareness, and the escape model is capable of integrating much of the available evidence about binge eating.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Emotional Eating Scale: the development of a measure to assess coping with negative affect by eating

TL;DR: Lack of correlation between a measure of cognitive restraint and EES subscales suggests that emotional eating may precipitate binge episodes among the obese independent of the level of restraint.
Journal ArticleDOI

A revision of the bulimia test : the BULIT-R

TL;DR: The Bulimia Test was revised (BULIT-R) to accommodate the DSM-III-R criteria of bulimia nervosa as discussed by the authors, and a 28-item, self-report, multiple-choice scale was developed by comparing responses of clinically identified female bulimics with those of female college students.
Journal ArticleDOI

Alcoholism and memory: broadening the scope of alcohol-expectancy research.

TL;DR: This article shows that expectancy findings, discussed by Leigh (1989a) as reflecting "psychometric" limitations, are instead quite consistent with recent network models of memory structure.
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