What do I look like? Perceptual confidence in bulimia nervosa
Cognitive confidence, a type of metacognition referring to confidence in one’s cognitive abilities (e.g., memory, perception, etc.), has been identified as relevant to eating disorders (EDs) using self-report measures. Repeated checking has been found to elicit decreases in perceptual confidence in...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Eating and weight disorders 2020-02, Vol.25 (1), p.177-183 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Cognitive confidence, a type of metacognition referring to confidence in one’s cognitive abilities (e.g., memory, perception, etc.), has been identified as relevant to eating disorders (EDs) using self-report measures. Repeated checking has been found to elicit decreases in perceptual confidence in obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). The purpose of the present study was to experimentally investigate perceptual confidence, a type of cognitive confidence, in EDs. Specifically, this construct was investigated in the context of body checking, a behaviour with similarities to compulsive checking as observed in OCD. Women with bulimia nervosa (BN;
n
= 21) and healthy controls (HC;
n
= 24) participated in the study. There were no group differences with regards to perceptual confidence at baseline
F
(1, 43) = 0.5,
p
= 0.48,
η
p
2
= 0.01, but a significant difference was observed post-checking
F
(1, 43) = 7.79,
p
= 0.008,
η
p
2
= 0.15, which was accounted for by significant decreases in perceptual confidence in the BN group
F
(1, 43) = 13.31,
p
|
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ISSN: | 1590-1262 1124-4909 1590-1262 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s40519-018-0542-x |