Emotional feeding as interpersonal emotion regulation: A developmental risk factor for binge-eating behaviors.
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| Abstract |    :  
                  Emotional feeding is an interpersonal emotion regulation strategy wherein people provide food to others as a means of influencing the recipient's emotional response. Parental emotional feeding has been linked to higher levels of emotional eating in children and adolescents using cross-sectional, retrospective, and prospective designs; however, there is little research on emotional feeding as a developmental risk factor for emotional eating and binge-eating behaviors in adolescence and adulthood. This Idea Worth Researching article explores the rationale for studying emotional feeding as a lifespan construct and its potential implications for understanding eating disorder pathology. Specifically, it offers suggestions for examining emotional feeding as a predictor of emotional eating and binge-eating behavior across the lifespan, assessing potential intergenerational transmission pathways, and researching similarities in feeding styles and emotional eating across a variety of relationships beyond the parent-child dyad.  | 
        
| Year of Publication |    :  
                  2019 
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| Journal |    :  
                  The International journal of eating disorders 
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| Volume |    :  
                  52 
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| Issue |    :  
                  5 
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| Number of Pages |    :  
                  515-519 
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| ISSN Number |    :  
                  0276-3478 
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| URL |    :  
                  https://doi.org/10.1002/eat.23044 
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| DOI |    :  
                  10.1002/eat.23044 
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| Short Title |    :  
                  Int J Eat Disord 
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