Objective: This article examines thought suppression tendencies in restrained eaters. Furthermore, the dynamics between failing thought suppression and thought control strategies are explored. Methods: One hundred and five overweight and normal-weight boys and girls (12-18 years) participated in a cross-sectional questionnaire-based study. A distinction was made between disinhibited restrained eaters (high restraint/high disinhibition), inhibited restrained eaters (high restraint/low disinhibition) and unrestrained eaters (low restraint) in both weight-groups. The Dutch Eating Behaviour Questionnaire (DEBQ) was used to select the different groups of (un)restrained eaters. The White Bear Suppression Inventory (WBSI) was employed to measure ...
Restraint theory was originally developed to explain differences in eating behaviour between normal...
Restrained eaters have been reported to overeat following a high caloric preload, a phenomenon refer...
Objective: People can use inhibitory control to temporarily inhibit their personal preferences to ac...
Objective: This article examines thought suppression tendencies in restrained eaters. Furthermore, t...
Original article can be found at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/ Copyright ElsevierRecent research ha...
Restraint refers to a chronic, deliberate concern about limiting food consumption. The present resea...
Past research has shown that strong emotional or motivational states can cause normally restrained e...
peer reviewedOBJECTIVE: While restrained eating is one of the most well-established risk factors of ...
Research has suggested that assessing an individual’s thoughts and concerns about their caloric inta...
Ferreira, C., Palmeira, L., Trindade, I. A., & Catarino, F. (2015). When thought suppression backfir...
Restrained eating involves a high degree of cognitive control and has been associated with heightene...
The clinical literature has long acknowledged the paradoxical findings that deliberate attempts to s...
Vita.Heatherton and Baumeister (1991) formulated escape theory as a way to understand the literature...
Successful self-control during food choice might require inhibition of impulses to avoid indulging i...
A new theory of eating regulation is presented to account for the over-responsiveness of restrained ...
Restraint theory was originally developed to explain differences in eating behaviour between normal...
Restrained eaters have been reported to overeat following a high caloric preload, a phenomenon refer...
Objective: People can use inhibitory control to temporarily inhibit their personal preferences to ac...
Objective: This article examines thought suppression tendencies in restrained eaters. Furthermore, t...
Original article can be found at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/ Copyright ElsevierRecent research ha...
Restraint refers to a chronic, deliberate concern about limiting food consumption. The present resea...
Past research has shown that strong emotional or motivational states can cause normally restrained e...
peer reviewedOBJECTIVE: While restrained eating is one of the most well-established risk factors of ...
Research has suggested that assessing an individual’s thoughts and concerns about their caloric inta...
Ferreira, C., Palmeira, L., Trindade, I. A., & Catarino, F. (2015). When thought suppression backfir...
Restrained eating involves a high degree of cognitive control and has been associated with heightene...
The clinical literature has long acknowledged the paradoxical findings that deliberate attempts to s...
Vita.Heatherton and Baumeister (1991) formulated escape theory as a way to understand the literature...
Successful self-control during food choice might require inhibition of impulses to avoid indulging i...
A new theory of eating regulation is presented to account for the over-responsiveness of restrained ...
Restraint theory was originally developed to explain differences in eating behaviour between normal...
Restrained eaters have been reported to overeat following a high caloric preload, a phenomenon refer...
Objective: People can use inhibitory control to temporarily inhibit their personal preferences to ac...