TY - JOUR
T1 - Emotional processing in eating disorders
T2 - Specific impairment or general distress related deficiency?
AU - Gilboa-Schechtman, Eva
AU - Avnon, Liora
AU - Zubery, Eynat
AU - Jeczmien, Pablo
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - The literature on eating disorders emphasizes the relationship between alexithymia and anorexia nervosa on the one hand, and between bulimia nervosa and affect dysregulation on the other. In our study, two questions are addressed: (1) Are there different patterns of emotional processing deficiencies in anorexia and bulimia? and (2) Is there a unique contribution of eating disorders to emotional processing deficiencies? Participants were women with anorexia nervosa (ANs, n = 20), bulimia nervosa (BNs, n = 20), and normal controls (NCs, n = 20). Three hypotheses were examined: (1) Women with eating disorders will exhibit lower emotional awareness and more deficient emotional regulation than will NCs (emotional deficiency); (2) ANs will be less emotionally aware than BNs, whereas BNs will be less capable of effective emotional regulation than ANs (disorder specificity); and (3) emotional distress will mediate the relationships between emotional processing and eating disorders (emotional distress mediation). Results supported the emotional deficiency and distress mediation hypotheses, and partially supported the disorder specificity hypothesis. The need to move beyond alexithymia in understanding the pattern of emotional processing deficiencies in eating disorders is discussed.
AB - The literature on eating disorders emphasizes the relationship between alexithymia and anorexia nervosa on the one hand, and between bulimia nervosa and affect dysregulation on the other. In our study, two questions are addressed: (1) Are there different patterns of emotional processing deficiencies in anorexia and bulimia? and (2) Is there a unique contribution of eating disorders to emotional processing deficiencies? Participants were women with anorexia nervosa (ANs, n = 20), bulimia nervosa (BNs, n = 20), and normal controls (NCs, n = 20). Three hypotheses were examined: (1) Women with eating disorders will exhibit lower emotional awareness and more deficient emotional regulation than will NCs (emotional deficiency); (2) ANs will be less emotionally aware than BNs, whereas BNs will be less capable of effective emotional regulation than ANs (disorder specificity); and (3) emotional distress will mediate the relationships between emotional processing and eating disorders (emotional distress mediation). Results supported the emotional deficiency and distress mediation hypotheses, and partially supported the disorder specificity hypothesis. The need to move beyond alexithymia in understanding the pattern of emotional processing deficiencies in eating disorders is discussed.
KW - Depression
KW - Eating disorders
KW - Emotional awareness
KW - Emotional processing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33750376085&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/da.20163
DO - 10.1002/da.20163
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C2 - 16688732
AN - SCOPUS:33750376085
SN - 1091-4269
VL - 23
SP - 331
EP - 339
JO - Depression and Anxiety
JF - Depression and Anxiety
IS - 6
ER -