Results 211 to 220 of about 153,722 (255)
ABSTRACT In this narrative review, I highlight diversity‐related developments in eating disorder (ED) research, situate my own program of work on adult men within the broader literature on boys and men, and focus on risk factors, symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment in boys and men.
Georgios Paslakis
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Objective The efficacy of psychological therapies for adolescents and adults with avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) has yet to be rigorously analyzed through systematic review or meta‐analysis. Method We identified articles from seven databases that presented psychological therapies for adolescents and adults with ARFID. First,
Copeland G. Winten +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Tick‐Tock, the Time Has Come: Leveraging TikTok to Understand, Prevent, and Treat Eating Disorders
ABSTRACT Objective TikTok—a highly engaging social media platform with a powerful algorithm that displays short videos—has become massively popular in recent years. As research highlights the concerning relationship between image‐based content on social media and disordered eating symptoms, TikTok may serve as an optimal platform to understand eating ...
Macarena Kruger +3 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Objective Many university students encounter barriers to timely support for disordered eating. Brief, scalable digital single‐session interventions (SSIs) may provide an engaging and accessible transdiagnostic pathway for early intervention where there is increased distress before a diagnosis emerges.
Maya Jabs, Tracey D. Wade
wiley +1 more source
Social and emotional self‐efficacy at work
Research has shown that self‐efficacy is often one of the most important personal resources in the work context. However, because this research has focused on cognitive and task‐oriented self‐efficacy, little is known about social and emotional dimensions of self‐efficacy at work.
Carina Loeb +2 more
exaly +4 more sources
Emotional self-efficacy and positive values
The aim of this study is to examine the relationship between emotional self-efficacy and positive values with a structural equation model. The research was conducted on 301 secondary school students. Emotional self-efficacy scale and positive values scale were used in the study.
Nihan Arslan, Arslan, Nihan
openaire +3 more sources
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Self-efficacy and emotional intelligence
Team Performance Management: An International Journal, 2019PurposeThis study aims to examine empirically the effect of emotional intelligence of the team, as calculated by the average of all team members’ individual emotional intelligence measurements, on the cohesiveness of the team, and the effect of the perception of self-efficacy of the team members on the relationship between emotional intelligence and ...
Janine Black +4 more
openaire +1 more source
Negative emotions and behaviour: The role of regulatory emotional self‐efficacy
Journal of Adolescence, 2018ABSTRACTThe objective of this study is to test a longitudinal model that analyses the direct effect of negative emotions (anger, depression and anxiety, wave 1) on prosocial and aggressive behaviour (wave 2) in adolescents. And the indirect effect of negative emotions (wave 1) on prosocial and aggressive behaviour (wave 2) through regulatory emotional ...
Belén, Mesurado +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Self-Efficacy, Emotional States, and Performance in Carom Billiards
Perceptual and Motor Skills, 2015Based on an integrative approach to the study of the emotional–cognitive–motor linkage in sport competition, the purpose was to examine the mediating role of emotion-related (psychobiosocial) states in the relationship between self-efficacy (technical and cognitive) and performance in carom billiards.
Di Corrado, Donatella +3 more
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Emotional Self-Efficacy and Alcohol and Tobacco Use in Adolescents
Journal of Drug Education, 2014This study examined relationships between emotional self-efficacy (ESE) and alcohol and tobacco use in a statewide sample of public high school adolescents ( n = 2,566). The Center for Disease Control Youth Risk Behavior Survey and an adolescent ESE scale were utilized.
Keith J, Zullig +2 more
openaire +2 more sources

