Publications by authors named "Burr E"

Objective: Prior research has indicated that outcome expectancies, sensitivity to punishment, and sensitivity to reward may predict harmful health behaviors concurrently, including disordered eating. Loss-of-control eating (LOCE), feeling unable to resist eating or stop once one has started, is associated with expectancies that eating alleviates negative affect (NA reduction expectancies) and expectancies that eating is rewarding (reward expectancies).

Method: A survey battery was administered examining LOCE pathology, sensitivity to punishment, sensitivity to reward, and eating expectancies to a sample of 1660 adults in the United States ( = 39.

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  • * This study examines a specific intervention based on Deviance Regulation Theory (DRT), which utilizes targeted messaging to encourage responsible drinking, and its impact on emotional health among 147 participants from a Southeastern university.
  • * Results indicate that both positive and negative messaging from the intervention led to reductions in depressive and anxiety symptoms, while the control group showed no improvement, suggesting that the DRT intervention may positively influence mental health alongside promoting responsible drinking.
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Adverse sexual experiences are highly prevalent among college students and associated with increased mental health symptoms and decreased use of protective behavioral strategies (PBS). The current study developed and validated a measure of dating and sexual PBS: the Sexual and Negative Dating Inventory (SANDI). Participants (64.

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Introduction: Older adults are increasingly using medical cannabis (MC). It is unclear if therapeutic effects increase problematic use patterns. The current study addresses this issue by examining symptom trajectories across the day and using trajectories to predict problematic use.

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College students continue to report problematic alcohol use. To mitigate adverse outcomes, recent studies have employed harm reduction strategies known as Protective Behavioral Strategies (PBS). Deviance Regulation Theory (DRT), an impression management intervention, has been used to promote the use of PBS.

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Objectives: Hispanic/Latinx drinkers have been found to experience more adverse alcohol-related consequences than any other racial/ethnic group. Due to this, researchers have looked at the connection between drinking and cultural factors, alongside discrimination, to further analyze what sociocultural factors lead to negative outcomes when drinking.

Design: Researchers used a sample of Hispanic/Latinx young adult drinkers (= 710) with an average age of 22.

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  • Nocturnal lower urinary tract symptoms, like nocturia and nocturnal enuresis, could help screen for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in patients at urogynecology clinics.
  • The study assessed how effective these symptoms are in identifying OSA, using a retrospective analysis of patients screened through established questionnaires and OSA testing.
  • Results showed that nocturia (≥2 episodes per night) has good sensitivity (86.4%) and fair specificity (58.5%) for OSA screening, while nocturnal enuresis showed lower overall effectiveness, indicating that nocturia is more reliable for clinical decision-making regarding OSA referrals.
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  • The study focused on protective behavioral strategies (PBS) for alcohol use and tested a two-factor model against the traditionally used three-factor model from the PBSS-20 among nearly 4,900 drinkers.
  • Both models showed similar effectiveness, but the two-factor model was simpler and provided more straightforward measurement of PBS.
  • The research found that the two-factor model had negative relationships with alcohol consumption and problems, suggesting a clearer framework for understanding how PBS impact alcohol-related outcomes.
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  • * The Sexual and Negative Dating Inventory (SANDI) measures protective strategies in dating and sexual contexts, showing promise in reducing ASEs among college students, particularly in a sample of 313 SGM individuals.
  • * Although SANDI did not predict a history of sexual violence, it was associated with lower sexual risk and reduced regretted sex over time, emphasizing the need for protective behaviors tailored to diverse gender and sexual identities.
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The incentive-sensitization theory (IST) has emerged as a potentially useful theory in explaining substance addiction. IST postulates that the prolonged use of a substance can alter neural systems that are often involved in incentive motivation and reward processes, leading to an increased "sensitization" to the substance and associated stimuli. However, this increased sensitization is thought to mediate only the individual's craving of the substance (e.

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Affect regulation models hypothesize that aversive affective states drive binge-eating behavior, which serves to regulate unpleasant emotions. Research using ecological momentary assessment (EMA) demonstrates that increases in guilt most strongly predict subsequent binge-eating episodes, raising the question: why would individuals with binge-eating pathology engage in a binge-eating episode when they feel guilty? Food craving is a robust predictor of binge eating and is commonly associated with subsequent feelings of guilt. The current study used EMA to test the hypothesis that food craving may promote increased feelings of guilt, which then predict an increased risk of binge eating within a sample of 109 individuals with binge-eating disorder.

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  • Recent research highlights a connection between an individual's identity and their behavior changes, especially regarding responsible drinking habits.
  • The study introduced a new tool called the Personal Assessment of Responsible Drinking Identity (PARDI) to measure aspects of responsible drinking identity among college students.
  • The findings suggest that PARDI is a reliable and valid measure that can predict safe drinking behaviors and may help improve substance use interventions by focusing on responsible drinking identity.
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Objective: The present study sought to characterize the temporal patterns of binge eating and theorized maintenance factors among individuals with binge-eating disorder (BED).

Method: Ecological momentary assessment of 112 individuals and mixed-effects models were used to characterize the within- and between-day temporal patterns of eating behaviors (binge eating, loss of control only eating, and overeating only), positive and negative affect, emotion regulation difficulty, and food craving.

Results: Risk for binge eating and overeating only was highest around 5:30 p.

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Loss-of-control eating (LOCE) is highly prevalent in college students and may be driven by enduring personality traits. Narcissism is often conceptualized with two broad domains: grandiose and vulnerable. The association between narcissism and LOCE has not been directly assessed, nor the potential influence of emotion regulation deficits, which are differentially associated with grandiosity and vulnerability.

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The prevalence of eating pathology among college students has increased significantly in recent years. This coincides with increases in the use of cannabis, both nationally, but also among college students. Problematic cannabis use has been linked to eating pathology in prior research.

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: Alcohol use continues to be prevalent and problematic among young adult samples. Protective behavioral strategies (PBS), which are harm reduction strategies utilized while drinking, have been linked to decreased alcohol use and subsequent alcohol-related problems. An individual's likelihood of adopting PBS and other health behaviors, according to The Health Belief Model (HBM), is dependent on perceived susceptibility to and severity of adverse health outcomes, as well as perceived benefits and barriers related to implementing those behaviors.

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Loss-of-control eating (LOCE, the subjective inability to refrain from eating or cease eating), is highly mood-driven. Mood-related eating motives and eating expectancies have been identified as contributors to binge eating. However, little is known about how these factors relate to LOCE, much less their relationship with daily-level LOCE.

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Background: Attentional bias (AB) has been linked to alcohol use, mood, and alcohol craving, with key differences across different types of mood and biological sex. However, further exploration of the role of AB across these alcohol variables is needed. The current study examined the relationship between mood and AB as predictors of alcohol craving using ecological momentary assessment (EMA).

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Objectives: Loss-of-control eating (LOCE) is often conceptualized as a negative reinforcement mechanism. However, LOCE does not consistently reduce negative affect (NA). One explanation for continued LOCE, despite a lack of NA reduction, may be expectations of NA reduction.

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From co-authored publications to sponsored projects involving multiple partner institutions, collaborative practice is an expected part of work in the academy. As evaluators of a National Science Foundation (NSF) Alliances for Graduate Education and the Professoriate (AGEP) grant awarded to four university partners in a large southern state, the authors recognized the increasing value of collaborative practice in the design, implementation, evaluation, and dissemination of findings in the partnership over time. When planning a program among partnering institutions, stakeholders may underestimate the need for, and value of, collaborative practice in facilitating partnership functioning.

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  • This study explores how aggregated forms of the protein ATXN1, linked to spinocerebellar ataxia type 1, spread from one cell to another through tunneling nanotubes.
  • Using a live cell model derived from the cerebellum, researchers found that ATXN1 aggregates first appear in the nucleus, then in the cytoplasm, and ultimately move to adjacent cells.
  • The findings indicate that the presence of aggregation-prone proteins can facilitate the formation of protein aggregates in neighboring cells, highlighting a potential mechanism for disease progression in related neurodegenerative disorders.
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People experiencing incarceration in the U.S. have a constitutional right to have access to health care.

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