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Emotion contagion moderates the relationship between emotionally-negative families and abnormal eating behavior

Abstract

Objective:

To reconcile empirical inconsistencies in the relationship between emotionally-negative families and daughters’ abnormal eating, we hypothesized a critical moderating variable: daughters’ vulnerability to emotion contagion.

Method:

A nonclinical sample of undergraduate females (N = 92) was recruited via an advertisement and completed self-report measures validated for assessing: families’ expressive negativity, daughters’ susceptibility to emotion contagion, dietary restraint, and disinhibition, eating attitudes, and several control variables (interpersonal orientation, alexithymia, and the big five personality traits: extraversion, conscientiousness, openness, neuroticism, and agreeableness).

Results:

All variables and interactions were entered as predictors in a multistep multiple regression equation. Only an emotion contagion by family expressivity interaction term significantly predicted unhealthy eating attitudes (β = .29, p = .02) and dietary restraint (β = .27, p = .03). Negatively expressive families significantly induced unhealthy eating and restraint but only among young women susceptible to emotion contagion (ps < .05).

Discussion:

Young women susceptible to emotion contagion may be at increased risk for eating disorders. © 2010 by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. (Int J Eat Disord 2010)

Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 11/19/2010 | Link to this post on IFP |
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