Self-Attitudes Lab
Welcome to University of Waterloo's Department of Psychology Self-Attitudes Lab! Research on self-attitudes, eating behaviour, and body image.
Welcome to the Self-Attitudes Lab! Our lab studies the way our various self-attitudes, like being critical or compassionate towards ourselves, influence the way we feel, think, and behave. We are especially interested in the relationship between self-attitudes, eating behaviour, and body image. Through our research, we seek to inspire new ways to understand, prevent, and treat eating disorders, an
04/15/2017
Perspective | Teaching children self-compassion by modeling it ourselves Learning to forgive myself is the way to show my son how to be okay with his own feelings.
Examining social support and given social support on self-reassurance in a daily diary context. A study investigating compassion and social mentality theory, read it here: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/310593791_Receiving_support_giving_support_and_self-reassurance_A_daily_diary_test_of_social_mentality_theory
Receiving support, giving support, and self-reassurance: A daily diary test of social mentality theory Social mentality theory suggests that the ability to be reassuring and compassionate to oneself relies on evolved systems of care-seeking and caregiving with others. Using a daily diary...
01/13/2017
A common misconception is that self-compassion and self-esteem are the same. In this article, psychology professor at the University of Texas Kristen Neff differentiates between the two and explains how we can boost compassion for ourselves.
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2016/05/why-self-compassion-works-better-than-self-esteem/481473/
Forget Self-Esteem—Try Self-Compassion Instead Trying to boost your own ego is largely pointless. Here's what works better.
12/24/2016
Practicing Mindfulness Could Ease Holiday Stress Studies have shown many benefits of mindfulness. New research suggests practicing mindfulness may help curb overspending and ease stress during the holidays.
New study suggests anorexia nervosa may be better explained as pleasure of thinness, rather than fear of gaining weight.
Anorexia nervosa: Pleasure at getting thin more than fear of getting fat Anorexia nervosa might not be explained by fear of gaining weight, but by the pleasure of losing it, say researchers, adding that the phenomenon might be genetically influenced. The work challenges the notion of fear of weight gain in anorexia patients.
10/19/2016
A study conducted by Janet Liechty at the University of Illinois finds aspects of body-related self-concepts to be "influenced by family socialization processes beginning as early as preschool."
Preschoolers form body images -- but parents are unaware, study says
Preschoolers may express awareness about body-image issues -- but their parents may miss opportunities to promote positive body-image formation in their children because parents believe them to be too young to have these concerns, new research suggests.
University of Illinois eating disorders and bo...
10/19/2016
"When positive affirmations and messages about self-love fall short and shame seems to be winning out, self-compassion can offer hope."
Self-Compassion for Shame and Eating Disorder Recovery Shame is a powerful emotion and may be experienced when recovering from an eating disorder. When shame seems to be winning, counter with self-compassion.
09/29/2016
Body image and self-compassion | Gustafson - Auburn Reporter "Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels," the iconic supermodel Kate Moss once famously said, presumably suggesting that no indulgence is worth the damage it does to a slim figure.
A study conducted by Dr. Kelly & Dr. Tasca found a patient's eating pathology to be more severe following periods of increased shame. Moreover, levels of shame decreased following periods of increased self-compassion or decreased eating pathology. Read it here: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/eat.22527/epdf
08/14/2016
The Common Habit That Could Totally Warp Your Body Image Young adults who engage in this behavior the most could be at a higher risk of developing eating disorders and body image problems, according to new research.
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Waterloo, ON
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Opening Hours
| Monday | 8:30am - 5pm |
| Tuesday | 8:30am - 5pm |
| Wednesday | 8:30am - 5pm |
| Thursday | 8:30am - 5pm |
| Friday | 8:30am - 5pm |