Department of Psychology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, USA.
Department of Behavioral Neuroscience, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Oregon, USA.
Int J Eat Disord. 2022 Oct;55(10):1305-1315. doi: 10.1002/eat.23768. Epub 2022 Jul 2.
While negative affect (NA) typically increases risk for binge eating, the ultimate impact of NA may depend on a person's ability to regulate their emotions. In this daily, longitudinal study, we examined whether emotion regulation (ER) modified the strength of NA-dysregulated eating associations.
Women (N = 311) from the Michigan State University Twin Registry first reported dimensional binge eating symptoms and broad ER difficulties (e.g., limited emotional awareness, difficulty controlling emotional impulses). Participants then rated use of adaptive (cognitive reappraisal, social sharing, situation modification, and acceptance) and maladaptive (rumination, expressive suppression, and self-criticism) ER strategies, emotional eating (EE), objective binge eating (OBE), and NA once daily for 49 consecutive days.
There were several main effects of ER on binge-eating pathology in both between-person (i.e., comparing women who differed on average) and within-person (i.e., examining fluctuations in variables day-to-day) analyses. Between-person, greater broad ER difficulties, greater maladaptive strategy use, and lower adaptive strategy use were all associated with greater binge-eating pathology. Within-person, greater maladaptive strategy use was associated with greater odds of OBE on that day and on the following day. However, neither broad ER difficulties nor use of specific strategies moderated associations between NA and dysregulated eating in between- or within-person analyses.
While ER is independently associated with risk for dysregulated eating, it may not fully mitigate the impact of NA. Additional strategies (e.g., decreasing environmental stressors and increasing social support) may be needed to minimize NA and its impact on dysregulated eating.
Negative affect (NA; e.g., sadness, guilt) increases dysregulated eating risk. Because NA is sometimes unavoidable, we examined whether emotion regulation (ER; i.e., how a person responds to their emotions) might impact whether NA leads to dysregulated eating. Although more effective ER was associated with less dysregulated eating overall, ER did not impact the association between NA and dysregulated eating. Other approaches may therefore be needed to mitigate NA-dysregulated eating associations.
虽然负性情绪(NA)通常会增加暴食的风险,但 NA 的最终影响可能取决于一个人调节情绪的能力。在这项日常的纵向研究中,我们检验了情绪调节(ER)是否改变了 NA 失调性进食关联的强度。
密歇根州立大学双胞胎登记处的女性(N=311)首先报告了多维暴食症状和广泛的 ER 困难(例如,情绪意识有限、难以控制情绪冲动)。然后,参与者每天一次对适应性(认知重评、社会分享、情境修正和接受)和非适应性(反刍、表达抑制和自我批评)ER 策略、情绪性进食(EE)、客观暴食(OBE)和 NA 进行评价,共 49 天。
在个体间(即比较在平均值上有差异的女性)和个体内(即每天检查变量的波动)分析中,ER 对暴食病理有几个主要影响。个体间,更广泛的 ER 困难、更多的非适应性策略使用和更少的适应性策略使用与更大的暴食病理相关。个体内,更多的非适应性策略使用与当天和次日 OBE 的可能性更大相关。然而,在个体间或个体内分析中,广泛的 ER 困难或特定策略的使用都没有调节 NA 与失调性进食之间的关联。
虽然 ER 与失调性进食的风险独立相关,但它可能无法完全减轻 NA 的影响。可能需要其他策略(例如,减少环境压力源和增加社会支持)来最大限度地减少 NA 及其对失调性进食的影响。
负性情绪(NA;例如,悲伤、内疚)会增加进食失调的风险。由于 NA 有时是不可避免的,我们研究了情绪调节(ER;即一个人对情绪的反应)是否会影响 NA 是否导致进食失调。尽管更有效的 ER 与整体上更少的失调性进食相关,但 ER 并未影响 NA 与失调性进食之间的关联。因此,可能需要其他方法来减轻 NA 与失调性进食的关联。