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Journal ArticleDOI

The three-factor eating questionnaire to measure dietary restraint, disinhibition and hunger

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TLDR
The first step was a collation of items from two existing questionnaires that measure the related concepts of 'restrained eating' and 'latent obesity', to which were added items newly written to elucidate these concepts.
About
This article is published in Journal of Psychosomatic Research.The article was published on 1985-01-01. It has received 4391 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire & Intuitive eating.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Dutch Eating Behavior Questionnaire (DEBQ) for assessment of restrained, emotional, and external eating behavior.

TL;DR: The Dutch Eating Behaviour Questionnaire (DEBQ) with scales for restrained, emotional, and external eating is described in this article, which indicates a high degree of stability of dimensions on the eating behavior scales.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development of a Measure of the Motives Underlying the Selection of Food: the Food Choice Questionnaire

TL;DR: The development of a multidimensional measure of motives related to food choice, developed through factor analysis of responses from a sample of 358 adults ranging in age from 18 to 87 years is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development of the Children's Eating Behaviour Questionnaire

TL;DR: The CEBQ should provide a useful measure of eating style for research into the early precursors of obesity or eating disorders, and is especially important in relation to the growing evidence for the heritability of obesity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Who succeeds in maintaining weight loss? A conceptual review of factors associated with weight loss maintenance and weight regain.

TL;DR: Successful weight maintenance is associated with more initial weight loss, reaching a self‐determined goal weight, having a physically active lifestyle, a regular meal rhythm including breakfast and healthier eating, control of over‐eating and self‐monitoring of behaviours.
Journal ArticleDOI

Discrepancy between Self-Reported and Actual Caloric Intake and Exercise in Obese Subjects

TL;DR: The failure of some obese subjects to lose weight while eating a diet they report as low in calories is due to an energy intake substantially higher than reported and an overestimation of physical activity, not to an abnormality in thermogenesis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The assessment of binge eating severity among obese persons

TL;DR: The results showed that the Binge Eating Scale successfully discriminated among persons judged by trained interviewers to have either no, moderate or severe binge eating problems, such that severe bingers tended to set up diets which were unrealistically strict while reporting low efficacy expectations to sustain a diet.
Journal ArticleDOI

Restrained and unrestrained eating

TL;DR: Nisbett's model of obesity implies that individual differences in relative deprivation within obese and normal weight groups should produce corresponding within-group differences in eating behavior, but consideration was given to the concept of "restraint" as an important behavioral mechanism affecting the expression of physiologically-based hungar.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anxiety, restraint, and eating behavior.

TL;DR: The results indicated that although some individuals may eat more when anxious, there is little empirical support for the notion that eating serves to reduce anxiety, and the psychosomatic hypothesis of obesity had failed to find confirmation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The dynamics of "structured" personality tests.

TL;DR: In this paper, a series of clinical psycholo- gists in the military services were described, with which the present writer is familiar only indirectly: the utility of any instrument in the medical situation can be most competently assessed by those in contact with clinical material in that situation, and the present paper is in no sense to be construed as an answer to or an attempted refutation of Hutt's remarks.
Book ChapterDOI

Craving for Alcohol, Loss of Control, and Relapse: A Cognitive-Behavioral Analysis

TL;DR: A critical review of the relapse process as traditionally defined within the medical or “disease” model of alcoholism is provided.
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