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Negative affect and binge eating: Reconciling differences between two analytic approaches in ecological momentary assessment research
Author(s) -
Berg Kelly C.,
Cao Li,
Crosby Ross D.,
Engel Scott G.,
Peterson Carol B.,
Crow Scott J.,
Le Grange Daniel,
Mitchell James E.,
Lavender Jason M.,
Durkin Nora,
Wonderlich Stephen A.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
international journal of eating disorders
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.785
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1098-108X
pISSN - 0276-3478
DOI - 10.1002/eat.22770
Subject(s) - binge eating , psychology , affect (linguistics) , bulimia nervosa , binge eating disorder , anorexia nervosa , eating disorders , developmental psychology , clinical psychology , communication
Objective Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) research has produced contradictory findings regarding the trajectory of negative affect after binge‐eating episodes. Given the clinical implications, the objective of the current study was to reconcile these inconsistencies by comparing the two most commonly employed statistical approaches used to analyze these data. Method Data from two EMA studies were analyzed separately. Study 1 included 118 adult females with full‐ or subthreshold DSM‐IV anorexia nervosa. Study 2 included 131 adult females with full‐threshold DSM‐IV bulimia nervosa. For each dataset, the single most proximal negative affect ratings preceding and following a binge‐eating episode were compared. The times at which these ratings were made, relative to binge‐eating episodes, were also compared. Results The results indicate that the average proximal pre‐binge ratings of negative affect were significantly higher than the average proximal post‐binge ratings of negative affect. However, results also indicate that the average proximal post‐binge ratings of negative affect were made significantly closer in time to the binge‐eating episodes (∼20 min post‐binge) than the average proximal pre‐binge ratings of negative affect (∼2.5 hr pre‐binge). A graphical representation of the results demonstrates that the average proximal pre‐binge and post‐binge ratings map closely onto the results of previous studies. Discussion These data provide one possible explanation for the inconsistent findings regarding the trajectory of negative affect after binge eating. Moreover, they suggest that the findings from previous studies are not necessarily contradictory, but may be complementary, and appear to bolster support for the affect regulation model of binge eating.

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