18 results on '"Vroling MS"'
Search Results
2. Reducing binge eating through behavioral-focused versus emotion-focused implementation intentions in patients with binge eating disorder or bulimia nervosa: An experimental approach.
- Author
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Tanis J, Martijn C, Vroling MS, Maas J, and Keijsers GPJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Intention, Emotions, Binge-Eating Disorder therapy, Binge-Eating Disorder psychology, Bulimia Nervosa drug therapy, Bulimia Nervosa psychology, Bulimia psychology
- Abstract
Binge eating disorder (BED) and bulimia nervosa (BN) are characterized by recurrent binge eating, episodes of consuming large amounts of food in a discrete period of time associated with a loss of control. Implementation intentions are explicit if-then plans that engender goal-directed action, and rely less on cognitive control than standard treatment options. In a sample with BED and BN, we compared two implementation intention conditions to a control condition. In the behavior-focused condition, implementation intentions targeted binge eating behaviors. In the emotion-focused condition, implementation intentions targeted negative affect preceding binge eating. In the control condition, only goal intentions were set. Each condition comprised three sessions. Participants kept food diaries for four weeks. Compared to the control condition both implementation intention conditions showed significant and large reductions of binge eating that persisted for six months. Effects did not differ between the behavior-focused and emotion-focused implementation intention conditions. These results demonstrate that three sessions on implementation intention formation can lead to long-term reductions in binge eating in patients with BED or BN. Learning how to form implementation intentions seems a recommendable addition to the current standard treatment. Future research could investigate the added value of fully personalized implementation intentions. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NL52600.068.15., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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3. Effects of implementation intentions and mental imagery on subjective binge eating.
- Author
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Tanis J, Vroling MS, Maas J, Martijn C, and Keijsers GPJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Intention, Binge-Eating Disorder therapy, Bulimia, Bulimia Nervosa therapy
- Abstract
Objective: Binge-eating disorder (BED) and bulimia nervosa (BN) are characterised by binge eating. Changing unwanted behaviour is difficult, as intentions do not automatically lead to action. Implementation intentions (IIs) may help bridging the gap between intentions and behaviour. IIs are 'if-then' plans promoting goal attainment. Effects are moderated by degree of plan formation. Using mental imagery (MI) to impress IIs may strengthen plan formation and goal attainment., Method: In a students' sample with subjective binge eating, we compared IIs without MI, IIs with MI, and a control condition regarding their ability to reduce binge eating. Participants received three II-sessions and kept food diaries for 4 weeks., Results: Results showed a significant and medium to large reduction of binge eating in both II-conditions compared to the control condition, that was sustained for 6 months. No additional effects of MI were found., Conclusions: Applying IIs results in long-lasting reductions in subjective binge eating. The absence of additional effects of MI may be due to floor effects. Also, participants in the IIs without MI condition may have applied MI without being instructed to do so. In future research, ideally with a clinical sample, it is recommended to prevent or control for this., (© 2023 The Authors. European Eating Disorders Review published by Eating Disorders Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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4. Effects of implementation intentions on subthreshold binge eating.
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Tanis J, Vroling MS, Martijn C, van Heijningen LA, Maas J, and Keijsers GPJ
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- Feeding Behavior, Humans, Intention, Binge-Eating Disorder, Bulimia, Bulimia Nervosa
- Abstract
Binge eating disorder (BED) and bulimia nervosa (BN) are characterized by binge eating. Frequently related to negative affect, binge eating is considered unwanted eating behavior. It is often preceded by a shift away from the goal of a healthy eating pattern. Implementation intentions are 'if-then' plans that may prevent such shifts in goals. In a students' sample with subthreshold binge eating, two implementation intention conditions were compared to a control condition in which only goals were formed. In the behavior-focused condition, implementation intentions targeted binge eating; in the emotion-focused condition, implementation intentions targeted negative affect preceding binge eating. All participants received three sessions and kept food diaries for four weeks, followed by a post-test and a one-month, three-months, and six-months follow-up. Compared to the control condition, both implementation intention conditions showed significant and large reductions in binge eating lasting for six months. Effects did not differ between both implementation intention conditions. Three implementation intention sessions reduced subthreshold binge eating. This continued for six months after the final session. Contrary to expectations, behavior-focused and emotion-focused implementation intentions were equally effective, possibly due to other triggers than negative affect. Future research should address their usefulness in BED and BN.
- Published
- 2022
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5. Dialectical behavior therapy compared to cognitive behavior therapy in binge-eating disorder: An effectiveness study with 6-month follow-up.
- Author
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Lammers MW, Vroling MS, Crosby RD, and van Strien T
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- Behavior Therapy methods, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Treatment Outcome, Binge-Eating Disorder psychology, Binge-Eating Disorder therapy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy methods, Dialectical Behavior Therapy methods
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate whether the results of a quasi-randomized study, comparing dialectical behavior therapy for binge-eating disorder (DBT-BED) and an intensive, outpatient cognitive behavior therapy (CBT+) in individuals with BED, would be replicated in a nonrandomized study with patients who more closely resemble everyday clinical practice., Method: Patients with (subthreshold) BED (N = 175) started one of two group treatments: DBT-BED (n = 42) or CBT+ (n = 133), at a community eating disorder service. Measures of eating disorder pathology, emotion regulation, and general psychopathology were examined at end of treatment (EOT) and at 6-month follow-up using generalized linear models with multiple imputation., Results: Both treatments lead to substantial decreases on primary and secondary measures. Statistically significant, medium-size differences between groups were limited to global eating disorder psychopathology (d = -.62; 95% CI = .231, .949) at EOT and depressive symptoms at follow-up (d = -.45; 95% CI = .149, 6.965), favoring CBT+. Dropout of treatment included 15.0% from CBT+ and 19.0% from DBT-BED (difference nonsignificant)., Discussion: Decreases in global eating disorder psychopathology were achieved faster with CBT+. Overall, improvements in DBT-BED were comparable to those observed in CBT+. Findings of the original trial, favoring CBT+ on the number of OBE episodes, emotional dysregulation and self-esteem at EOT, and on eating disorder psychopathology and self-esteem at follow-up, were not replicated. With similar rates of treatment dropout and about half of the therapy time used in CBT+, DBT-BED can be considered a relevant treatment for BED in everyday clinical practice., Public Significance: In this effectiveness study, dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) resulted in clinically relevant improvements in individuals with binge eating disorder. Changes were broadly comparable to those of cognitive behavior therapy (CBT), the current treatment of choice. Although CBT resulted in decreases in eating disorder psychopathology faster, there was a trend toward relapse in CBT at 6-month follow-up. Therefore, the less costly DBT-program can be considered a relevant treatment in clinical practice., (© 2022 The Authors. International Journal of Eating Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2022
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6. Evaluation of the cognitive behavioural theory of eating disorders: A network analysis investigation.
- Author
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Mares SHW, Burger J, Lemmens LHJM, van Elburg AA, and Vroling MS
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- Cognition, Humans, Anorexia Nervosa psychology, Binge-Eating Disorder psychology, Bulimia Nervosa psychology, Bulimia Nervosa therapy, Feeding and Eating Disorders diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: One of the prevailing theories of eating disorders (ED) is the transdiagnostic cognitive behavioural theory of eating disorders, which suggests that certain ED symptoms, such as over-valuation of eating, shape, and weight, may be more central than others. In the present study, network analyses were used to evaluate these assumptions in a patient sample., Methods: Participants were 336 individuals receiving treatment at an expert center for ED in the Netherlands. Eating disorder symptoms were used to create transdiagnostic and diagnosis-specific networks and assess symptom centrality and density of the networks., Results: Networks for patients with bulimia nervosa and binge eating disorder confirmed that over-valuation of shape, weight, and eating is the most central symptom in the network. A transdiagnostic network of ED symptoms and separate networks for patients with anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa showed that strict dieting was an additional central ED symptom. An exploratory analysis revealed that, although eating disorder symptoms decreased, there were no differences in density of the eating disorder networks before and after treatment with cognitive behavioural therapy., Discussion: In conclusion, the current study confirmed that over-valuation of shape, weight, and eating is a central symptom across eating disorders, in agreement with the transdiagnostic cognitive behavioural model of eating disorders. Specifically targeting this symptom in treatment could lead to other symptoms improving as a result., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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7. Correction to: Dialectical behavior therapy adapted for binge eating compared to cognitive behavior therapy in obese adults with binge eating disorder: a controlled study.
- Author
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Lammers MW, Vroling MS, Crosby RD, and van Strien T
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- 2021
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8. Dialectical behavior therapy adapted for binge eating compared to cognitive behavior therapy in obese adults with binge eating disorder: a controlled study.
- Author
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Lammers MW, Vroling MS, Crosby RD, and van Strien T
- Abstract
Background: Current guidelines recommend cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) as the treatment of choice for binge eating disorder (BED). Although CBT is quite effective, a substantial number of patients do not reach abstinence from binge eating. To tackle this problem, various theoretical conceptualizations and treatment models have been proposed. Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), focusing on emotion regulation, is one such model. Preliminary evidence comparing DBT adapted for BED (DBT-BED) to CBT is promising but the available data do not favor one treatment over the other. The aim of this study is to evaluate outcome of DBT-BED, compared to a more intensive eating disorders-focused form of cognitive behavior therapy (CBT+), in individuals with BED who are overweight and engage in emotional eating., Methods: Seventy-four obese patients with BED who reported above average levels of emotional eating were quasi-randomly allocated to one of two manualized 20-session group treatments: DBT-BED ( n = 41) or CBT+ ( n = 33). Intention-to-treat outcome was examined at post-treatment and at 6-month follow-up using general or generalized linear models with multiple imputation., Results: Overall, greater improvements were observed in CBT+. Differences in number of objective binge eating episodes at end of treatment, and eating disorder psychopathology (EDE-Q Global score) and self-esteem (EDI-3 Low Self-Esteem) at follow-up reached statistical significance with medium effect sizes (Cohen's d between .46 and .59). Of the patients in the DBT group, 69.9% reached clinically significant change at end of the treatment vs 65.0% at follow-up. Although higher, this was not significantly different from the patients in the CBT+ group (52.9% vs 45.8%)., Conclusions: The results of this study show that CBT+ produces better outcomes than the less intensive DBT-BED on several measures. Yet, regardless of the dose-difference, the data suggest that DBT-BED and CBT+ lead to comparable levels of clinically meaningful change in global eating disorder psychopathology. Future recommendations include the need for dose-matched comparisons in a sufficiently powered randomized controlled trial, and the need to determine mediators and moderators of treatment outcome., Trial Registration: Nederlands Trial Register: NL3982 (NTR4154). Date of registration: 2013 August 28, retrospectively registered., Competing Interests: Competing interestsThe authors declare that they have no competing interests other than TvS receiving royalties from the DEBQ and the EDI-3 and RDC being a paid statistical consultant for Health Outcomes Solutions, Winter Park, Florida., (© The Author(s) 2020.)
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- 2020
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9. [Trauma and anorexia nervosa: the association between trauma characteristics, PTSD and the duration of the eating disorder].
- Author
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Mares SHW and Vroling MS
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- Adult, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Prevalence, Sexual Behavior, Anorexia Nervosa epidemiology, Feeding and Eating Disorders epidemiology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Research into the prevalence of various traumatic events in anorexia nervosa (AN) is sparse, with the findings from these studies varying. In addition, the number and age at which traumatic events occurred was not consistently included in previous studies.
AIM: To study the prevalence of different types of traumatic events, whether they occurred in early childhood or not, the number of different events and their associations with PTSD symptoms, and the duration of the eating disorder among clinically admitted patients with AN.
METHOD: In the admission department of an eating disorder clinic, 60 female patients with AN completed questionnaires about traumatic events and symptoms of PTSD during the first week of admission.
RESULTS: Although physical violence during early childhood and traumatic sexual events in later childhood and adulthood were the most commonly reported, there was a variety of types of traumatic events that were frequently reported. In addition, patients who had experienced traumatic events at a young age and / or multiple types of traumatic events had a longer-lasting eating disorder.
CONCLUSION: A thorough inventory of trauma in patients with eating disorders seems important, as this could play a role in maintaining an eating disorder.- Published
- 2020
10. Approach and avoidance tendencies in depression and anxiety disorders.
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Struijs SY, Lamers F, Vroling MS, Roelofs K, Spinhoven P, and Penninx BWJH
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Middle Aged, Self Report, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Depressive Disorder psychology, Facial Expression, Inhibition, Psychological
- Abstract
Anxiety is linked to increased avoidance and inhibition, whereas depression is linked to decreased approach and diminished behavioral activation. Although these notions are widely recognized, systematic investigation of approach-avoidance tendencies is lacking across these diagnostic groups. Participants (mean age = 45.6; 65.8% female) were subdivided in healthy controls (405), remitted patients (877) and currently anxious (217), depressed (154) or comorbid (154) patients. Automatic approach-avoidance tendencies in reaction to facial expression were assessed using the Approach-Avoidance-Task (AAT). Self-reported trait approach and avoidance tendencies were assessed using the BIS/BAS scale. Severity of psychopathology was assessed to examine dose-response relationships. We did not find any consistent associations of automatic approach-avoidance tendencies with psychiatric variables. In contrast, medium to large differences in BIS scores showed increased trait avoidance tendencies in all patient groups relative to healthy controls. Overall, it seems that increased trait avoidance, rather than decreased approach, is a characteristic of affective disorders. This holds for both depressed and anxious patients and more strongly so in severe and chronic patients. It underlines the importance to address trait avoidance tendencies in the treatment of affective disorders., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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11. "What I believe is true": Belief-confirming reasoning bias in social anxiety disorder.
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Vroling MS, Glashouwer KA, Lange WG, Allart-van Dam E, and de Jong PJ
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- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Panic Disorder physiopathology, Panic Disorder psychology, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Bias, Culture, Phobia, Social physiopathology, Phobia, Social psychology, Thinking physiology
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Research shows that people tend to consider believable conclusions as valid and unbelievable conclusions as invalid (belief bias). When applied to anxiogenic beliefs, this belief bias could well hinder the correction of dysfunctional convictions. Previous work has shown that high socially anxious students indeed display such fear-confirming, belief biased, reasoning. A critical next question is whether these findings translate to a clinical population of people with social anxiety disorder (SAD). We test whether (i) patients with SAD show belief bias with regard to SAD-relevant themes, (ii) this belief bias is specific for SAD patients or can also be found in panic disorder (PD) patients, (iii) differential belief bias effects in SAD are restricted to social anxiety concerns or are also evident in the context of reasoning with neutral themes., Method: 45 SAD patients, 24 PD patients, and 45 non-symptomatic controls (NSCs) completed a syllogistic belief bias task with SAD-relevant and neutral content., Results: SAD patients displayed belief bias for social anxiety related materials, while the PD group and the NSC group did not. Yet, the difference between SAD and PD was not significant. All groups showed similar belief bias effects for neutral content., Limitations: Content of the belief bias task was not tailored to idiosyncratic beliefs. The study lacked power to detect medium or small differences., Conclusions: SAD patients showed concern-congruent belief biased interference effects when judging the logical validity of social anxiety relevant syllogisms. Such concern-relevant belief bias may contribute to the persistence of anxiogenic beliefs., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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12. Predicting Dropout from Intensive Outpatient Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Binge Eating Disorder Using Pre-treatment Characteristics: A Naturalistic Study.
- Author
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Vroling MS, Wiersma FE, Lammers MW, and Noorthoorn EO
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- Adult, Binge-Eating Disorder psychology, Body Weight, Bulimia therapy, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Personality Disorders, Psychopathology, Social Adjustment, Treatment Outcome, Binge-Eating Disorder therapy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Outpatients, Patient Dropouts
- Abstract
Background: Dropout rates in binge eating disorder (BED) treatment are high (17-30%), and predictors of dropout are unknown., Method: Participants were 376 patients following an intensive outpatient cognitive behavioural therapy programme for BED, 82 of whom (21.8%) dropped out of treatment. An exploratory logistic regression was performed using eating disorder variables, general psychopathology, personality and demographics to identify predictors of dropout., Results: Binge eating pathology, preoccupations with eating, shape and weight, social adjustment, agreeableness, and social embedding appeared to be significant predictors of dropout. Also, education showed an association to dropout., Discussion: This is one of the first studies investigating pre-treatment predictors for dropout in BED treatment. The total explained variance of the prediction model was low, yet the model correctly classified 80.6% of cases, which is comparable to other dropout studies in eating disorders. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and Eating Disorders Association., (Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and Eating Disorders Association.)
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- 2016
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13. Predictors of outcome for cognitive behaviour therapy in binge eating disorder.
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Lammers MW, Vroling MS, Ouwens MA, Engels RC, and van Strien T
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- Adult, Binge-Eating Disorder diagnosis, Binge-Eating Disorder psychology, Body Image, Bulimia psychology, Bulimia therapy, Emotions, Feeding and Eating Disorders psychology, Feeding and Eating Disorders therapy, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Netherlands, Predictive Value of Tests, Psychopathology, Regression Analysis, Self Report, Socioeconomic Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Thinness, Treatment Outcome, Binge-Eating Disorder therapy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Outcome Assessment, Health Care statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
The aim of this naturalistic study was to identify pretreatment predictors of response to cognitive behaviour therapy in treatment-seeking patients with binge eating disorder (BED; N = 304). Furthermore, we examined end-of-treatment factors that predict treatment outcome 6 months later (N = 190). We assessed eating disorder psychopathology, general psychopathology, personality characteristics and demographic variables using self-report questionnaires. Treatment outcome was measured using the bulimia subscale of the Eating Disorder Inventory 1. Predictors were determined using hierarchical linear regression analyses. Several variables significantly predicted outcome, four of which were found to be both baseline predictors of treatment outcome and end-of-treatment predictors of follow-up: Higher levels of drive for thinness, higher levels of interoceptive awareness, lower levels of binge eating pathology and, in women, lower levels of body dissatisfaction predicted better outcome in the short and longer term. Based on these results, several suggestions are made to improve treatment outcome for BED patients., (Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and Eating Disorders Association.)
- Published
- 2015
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14. Is the Eating Disorder Questionnaire-Online (EDQ-O) a valid diagnostic instrument for the DSM-IV-TR classification of eating disorders?
- Author
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ter Huurne ED, de Haan HA, ten Napel-Schutz MC, Postel MG, Menting J, van der Palen J, Vroling MS, and DeJong CA
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- Adolescent, Adult, Anorexia diagnosis, Anorexia psychology, Area Under Curve, Binge-Eating Disorder diagnosis, Binge-Eating Disorder psychology, Bulimia diagnosis, Bulimia psychology, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Female, Humans, Internet, Male, Middle Aged, Psychometrics, ROC Curve, Reproducibility of Results, Young Adult, Feeding and Eating Disorders classification, Feeding and Eating Disorders psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
Background: The Eating Disorder Questionnaire-Online (EDQ-O) is an online self-report questionnaire, which was developed specifically to provide a DSM-IV-TR classification of anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), binge-eating disorder (BED), and eating disorder not otherwise specified (EDNOS), without using a face-to-face clinical interview., Objective: The purpose of the present study was to examine the psychometric quality of the EDQ-O., Methods: The validity of the EDQ-O was determined by examining the agreement with the diagnoses obtained from the Longitudinal, Expert, and All DATA (LEAD) standard. Participants included 134 new patients of a specialist center for eating disorders located in the Netherlands., Results: Assessment of the validity of the EDQ-O yielded acceptable to good AUC (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve) values with a range from 0.72 to 0.83. Most other diagnostic efficiency statistics were also good except for a low sensitivity for AN (0.44), a low positive predictive value for BN (0.50), and a relatively low sensitivity for BED (0.66)., Conclusion: The results of the present study suggest that the EDQ-O performs acceptably as a diagnostic instrument for all DSM-IV-TR eating disorder classifications. However, suggestions are made to further improve the validity of the EDQ-O., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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15. Low implicit self-esteem and dysfunctional automatic associations in social anxiety disorder.
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Glashouwer KA, Vroling MS, de Jong PJ, Lange WG, and de Keijser J
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- Adult, Case-Control Studies, Cues, Female, Humans, Male, Panic Disorder psychology, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Psychological Tests, Sex Characteristics, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Association, Self Concept, Social Behavior
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Negative automatic associations towards the self and social cues are assumed to play an important role in social anxiety disorder. We tested whether social anxiety disorder patients (n = 45) showed stronger dysfunctional automatic associations than non-clinical controls (n = 45) and panic disorder patients (n = 24) and whether there existed gender differences in this respect., Methods: We used a single-target Implicit Association Test and an Implicit Association Test to measure dysfunctional automatic associations with social cues and implicit self-esteem, respectively., Results: Results showed that automatic associations with social cues were more dysfunctional in socially anxious patients than in both control groups, suggesting this might be a specific characteristic of social anxiety disorder. Socially anxious patients showed relatively low implicit self-esteem compared to non-clinical controls, whereas panic disorder patients scored in between both groups. Unexpectedly, we found that lower implicit self-esteem was related to higher severity of social anxiety symptoms in men, whereas no such relationship was found in women., Conclusions: These findings support the view that automatic negative associations with social cues and lowered implicit self-esteem may both help to enhance our understanding of the cognitive processes that underlie social anxiety disorder., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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16. Belief bias and the extinction of induced fear.
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Vroling MS and de Jong PJ
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- Conditioning, Classical, Electric Stimulation, Female, Humans, Individuality, Male, Photic Stimulation, Young Adult, Culture, Extinction, Psychological, Fear psychology
- Abstract
Some people show slower extinction of UCS expectancies than other people. Little is known about what predicts such delayed extinction. Extinction requires that people deduce the logical implication of corrective experiences challenging the previously learned CS-UCS contingency. "A strong habitual tendency to confirm beliefs" may therefore be a powerful mechanism immunising against refutation of UCS expectancies. This study investigated whether individual differences in such a belief confirming tendency (a process called "belief bias") may help in explaining individual differences in extinction. We tested whether relatively strong belief bias predicts delayed extinction of experimentally induced UCS expectancies. In a differential aversive conditioning paradigm, we used UCS-irrelevant (Experiment 1) and UCS-relevant (Experiment 2) pictorial stimuli as CS⁺ and CS⁻, and electrical stimulation as UCS. Belief bias indeed predicted delayed extinction of UCS expectancies when the CS⁺ was UCS-relevant (as is typically the case for phobic stimuli, Experiment 2). The study provides preliminary evidence that enhanced belief bias may indeed play a role in the persistence of UCS expectancies, and can thereby contribute to the development and persistence of anxiety disorders. The results also point to the relevance of reasoning tendencies in the search for predictors of delayed extinction of UCS expectancies.
- Published
- 2013
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17. Threat-confirming belief bias and symptoms of anxiety disorders.
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Vroling MS and de Jong PJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Analysis of Variance, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Psychological, Reaction Time physiology, Reproducibility of Results, Statistics as Topic, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Anxiety Disorders physiopathology, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Bias, Culture
- Abstract
This study tested the hypothesis that a generally enhanced threat-confirming reasoning style would set people at risk for the development of anxiety disorders. Therefore, a non-clinical student sample (N=146) was presented with a series of linear syllogisms referring to threatening and safety themes and with the anxiety subscale of the SCL-90 and trait anxiety in order to correlate reasoning with anxiety. Half of the syllogisms' conclusions were in line and half were in conflict with generally believable threat and safety related convictions (e.g., potassium cyanide is more toxic than tylenol; The Netherlands are safer than Afghanistan). For each type of syllogism, half was logically valid and half invalid. Overall, participants showed a clear interference of believability on logical reasoning, which is known as the belief bias effect. Furthermore, in line with the idea that people are generally characterized by a better safe than sorry strategy, the pattern indicated that the participants took more time to solve invalid threat related syllogisms as well as valid safety related syllogisms. This threat-confirming belief bias was however not especially pronounced in participants reporting relatively intense anxiety symptoms. Thus, the present findings do not lend support to the idea that a generally enhanced threat-confirming belief bias is a diathesis for the development of anxious psychopathology.
- Published
- 2010
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18. Deductive Reasoning and Social Anxiety: Evidence for a Fear-confirming Belief Bias.
- Author
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Vroling MS and de Jong PJ
- Abstract
This study investigated the relationship between belief bias and fear of negative evaluation. Belief bias refers to a bias in deductive reasoning that acts to confirm rather than falsify prior beliefs. Participants (N = 52) with varying levels of fear of negative evaluation completed a belief bias task by means of linear syllogisms, with stimuli covering both social anxiety convictions and factual neutral statements. A linear relationship was found between fear of negative evaluation and belief bias for the social anxiety conviction category. No differences in reasoning were found for the neutral syllogisms. These results support the view that highly socially anxious individuals do not have a reasoning abnormality, but do have difficulty judging anxiogenic information as false and reassuring convictions-contradicting information as true. Such belief bias logically prevents dysfunctional cognitions from being corrected, thereby sustaining phobic fear.
- Published
- 2009
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