Volume 52, Issue 5 p. 515-519
AN IDEA WORTH RESEARCHING

Emotional feeding as interpersonal emotion regulation: A developmental risk factor for binge-eating behaviors

Kara A. Christensen MA

Corresponding Author

Kara A. Christensen MA

Department of Psychology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina

Correspondence

Kara Christensen, Department of Psychology, The Ohio State University, 1835 Neil Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210.

Email: [email protected]

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First published: 15 February 2019
Citations: 10

Abstract

Emotional feeding is an interpersonal emotion regulation strategy wherein people provide food to others as a means of influencing the recipient's emotional response. Parental emotional feeding has been linked to higher levels of emotional eating in children and adolescents using cross-sectional, retrospective, and prospective designs; however, there is little research on emotional feeding as a developmental risk factor for emotional eating and binge-eating behaviors in adolescence and adulthood. This Idea Worth Researching article explores the rationale for studying emotional feeding as a lifespan construct and its potential implications for understanding eating disorder pathology. Specifically, it offers suggestions for examining emotional feeding as a predictor of emotional eating and binge-eating behavior across the lifespan, assessing potential intergenerational transmission pathways, and researching similarities in feeding styles and emotional eating across a variety of relationships beyond the parent–child dyad.

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