Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Isabella Conte"'
Publikováno v:
Nordic Journal of Arts, Culture and Health, Vol 4, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2022)
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/03ff7ad2920f4a20a31361c1968c440f
Autor:
Ruth Bernstein, Isabella Conte, Lauren D. Gulley, Reagan L. Miller, Emma L. M. Clark, Rachel G. Lucas-Thompson, Lauren B. Shomaker
Publikováno v:
Current Psychology.
Autor:
Jill L. Kaar, Virginia Jimenez, Lauren D. Gulley, Rachel G. Lucas-Thompson, Natalia Sanchez, Mark A. Prince, Isabella Conte, Stacey L. Simon, Sarah A. Johnson, Christopher L. Melby, Emma L M Clark, Lauren B. Shomaker, Reagan L Miller, Milena Casamassima
Publikováno v:
Journal of Behavioral Medicine. 44:694-703
Sleep difficulties may be one explanatory factor in the association between depression and insulin resistance; yet, explicit tests of this hypothesis are lacking. We determined if there was an indirect effect of depression symptoms on insulin resista
Publikováno v:
Body Image. 34:196-200
The Body Project is an evidence-based eating disorder prevention program that aims to prevent the onset of eating disorders by challenging the thin-ideal and promoting body acceptance through dissonance-based activities. One of the key program target
Autor:
Reagan L Miller, Lauren D. Gulley, Rachel G. Lucas-Thompson, Isabella Conte, Sarah A. Johnson, Natalia Sanchez, Christopher L. Melby, Virginia Jimenez, Metztli Ruiz-Jaquez, Emma L M Clark, Megan Verros, Milena Casamassima, Lauren B. Shomaker
Publikováno v:
Dev Psychobiol
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) heighten risk for adult obesity and cardiometabolic disease, but physiological factors underlying this connection are not well understood. We determined if ACEs were associated with physiological stress response a
Autor:
Kristina T. Legget, Sarah A. Johnson, Rachel G. Lucas-Thompson, Isabella Conte, Ruth Bernstein, Christopher L. Melby, Lauren D. Gulley, Emma L M Clark, Marc-Andre Cornier, Lauren B. Shomaker, Natalia Sanchez
Publikováno v:
Eat Behav
Background Mindfulness-based intervention (MBI) may offer a novel means of preventing excess weight gain in adolescents, theoretically by decreasing stress-eating through altering executive functioning (EF) and food-reward sensitivity. Methods N = 54