PurposeStudies have shown significant associations of dissociative symptoms with both eating and addictive disorders; however, the different forms of dissociation have been relatively understudied in relation to food addiction (FA). The main aim of this study was to investigate the association of certain forms of dissociative experiences (i.e., absorption, detachment and compartmentalization) with FA symptoms in a nonclinical sample.MethodsParticipants (N = 755; 543 women; age range: 18-65; mean age: 28.22 +/- 9.99 years) were evaluated using self-report measures of FA, dissociation, eating disturbances, and general psychopathology.ResultsCompartmentalization experiences (defined as pathological over-segregation of higher mental functions) were independently associated with FA symptoms (beta = 0.174; p = 0.013; CI = [0.008; 0.064]) even when confounding factors were controlled for.ConclusionThis finding suggests that compartmentalization symptoms can have a role in the conceptualization of FA, with such two phenomena possibly sharing common pathogenic processes.Level of evidence: Level V, cross-sectional descriptive study.
Dissociative experiences of compartmentalization are associated with food addiction symptoms: results from a cross-sectional report / Carbone, Giuseppe Alessio; De Rossi, Elena; Prevete, Elisabeth; Tarsitani, Lorenzo; Corazza, Ornella; Massullo, Chiara; Farina, Benedetto; Pasquini, Massimo; Taddei, Ines; Biondi, Massimo; Imperatori, Claudio; Bersani, Francesco Saverio. - In: EATING AND WEIGHT DISORDERS. - ISSN 1590-1262. - 28:1(2023), p. 28. [10.1007/s40519-023-01555-2]
Dissociative experiences of compartmentalization are associated with food addiction symptoms: results from a cross-sectional report
Prevete, Elisabeth;Tarsitani, Lorenzo;Pasquini, Massimo;Biondi, Massimo;Bersani, Francesco Saverio
2023
Abstract
PurposeStudies have shown significant associations of dissociative symptoms with both eating and addictive disorders; however, the different forms of dissociation have been relatively understudied in relation to food addiction (FA). The main aim of this study was to investigate the association of certain forms of dissociative experiences (i.e., absorption, detachment and compartmentalization) with FA symptoms in a nonclinical sample.MethodsParticipants (N = 755; 543 women; age range: 18-65; mean age: 28.22 +/- 9.99 years) were evaluated using self-report measures of FA, dissociation, eating disturbances, and general psychopathology.ResultsCompartmentalization experiences (defined as pathological over-segregation of higher mental functions) were independently associated with FA symptoms (beta = 0.174; p = 0.013; CI = [0.008; 0.064]) even when confounding factors were controlled for.ConclusionThis finding suggests that compartmentalization symptoms can have a role in the conceptualization of FA, with such two phenomena possibly sharing common pathogenic processes.Level of evidence: Level V, cross-sectional descriptive study.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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Carbone, De Rossi et al 2023 - Dissociative experiences of compartmentalization are associated with food addiction symptoms.pdf
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