Ecological momentary assessment in eating disorders research: recent findings and promising new directions
- PMID: 32740204
- PMCID: PMC7780347
- DOI: 10.1097/YCO.0000000000000639
Ecological momentary assessment in eating disorders research: recent findings and promising new directions
Abstract
Purpose of review: Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) is an important tool for clarifying common precipitants and consequences of eating disorder symptoms that might be meaningfully targeted in treatments for these pernicious disorders. This article reviews recent advances in EMA work conducted within clinical eating disorder samples.
Recent findings: Published studies from the past 2.5 years can broadly be categorized as involving functional analysis of eating disorder behaviors, examining hypothesized predictors of eating disorder symptoms, or applying novel approaches to EMA data. Examples of the latter category include the use of latent profile analysis with EMA data, integration of neurocognitive (e.g., ambulatory inhibitory control task) or biological indicators (e.g., fMRI, plasma leptin), and examining changes in associations between momentary variables over time through multiwave EMA data collection.
Summary: EMA studies in eating disorders have advanced significantly in recent years, with findings demonstrating strong support for the emotion regulation function of eating disorder behaviors and momentary predictors of distinct eating disorder symptoms. The use of novel statistical and data collection approaches represent exciting areas of growth, with likely implications for intervention approaches, including those that utilize ambulatory technology to deliver treatment.
Conflict of interest statement
References
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Schaefer LM, Smith KE, Anderson LM, Cao L, Crosby RD, Engel SG, et al. The role of affect in the maintenance of binge-eating disorder: evidence from an ecological momentary assessment study. J Abnorm Psychol. 2020;129(4):387–96.
*This study uses EMA data to examine the trajectories of positive and negative affect (including its constituent facets of guilty, hostility, anxiety, and sadness) in the four hours preceding and following binge-eating episodes among individuals with binge-eating disorder. Findings provide support for affect regulation models of binge eating and highlight the primary significance of guilt in driving binge-eating behavior. The authors discuss the drawbacks associated with other analytic techniques for examining functional affect-behavior relationships (e.g., single points comparison) and provide SPSS syntax for completing trajectory analysis.
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- Kolar DR, Neumayr C, Roth M, Voderholzer U, Perthes K, Schlegl S. Testing an emotion regulation model of physical activity in adolescents with anorexia nervosa: a pilot ecological momentary assessment. Eur Eat Disord Rev. 2020;28(2):170–83. - PubMed
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