| 1 | Influence of social-normative information on the modeling of food-related decisions | 2.7 | 4 | Citations (PDF) |
| 2 | Distinguishing dieting from restrained eating: A rejoinder to Lowe (2021) | 2.7 | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 3 | What is restrained eating and how do we identify it? | 2.7 | 94 | Citations (PDF) |
| 4 | Modeling of food intake among restrained and unrestrained eaters | 2.7 | 10 | Citations (PDF) |
| 5 | What does it mean to overeat? | 2.3 | 5 | Citations (PDF) |
| 6 | Food-based social comparisons influence liking and consumption. | 2.7 | 7 | Citations (PDF) |
| 7 | Overeating in Restrained and Unrestrained Eaters | 4.4 | 42 | Citations (PDF) |
| 8 | Normal Eating 2020, , 219-234 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 9 | The effect of the spatial positioning of a healthy food cue on food choice from a pictorial-style menu | 2.3 | 14 | Citations (PDF) |
| 10 | It's all in the timing: The effect of a healthy food cue on food choices from a pictorial menu | 2.7 | 13 | Citations (PDF) |
| 11 | Effects of Social Eating 2019, , 215-227 | | 7 | Citations (PDF) |
| 12 | A Theory of Normal Eating 2019, , 11-28 | | 5 | Citations (PDF) |
| 13 | Consumption Stereotypes and Impression Management: Food Intake 2019, , 79-94 | | 2 | Citations (PDF) |
| 14 | Normal Eating 2019, , 1-16 | | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 15 | Research Design, Methodology and Ethics 2019, , 29-40 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 16 | What Happens When We Overeat? 2019, , 163-179 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 17 | Concluding Remarks 2019, , 229-231 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 18 | Modeling of Food Intake 2019, , 41-55 | | 2 | Citations (PDF) |
| 19 | Social Facilitation 2019, , 181-200 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 20 | Social Comparison 2019, , 147-162 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 21 | A Theory of Normal Eating—Reprise and Non-social Examples 2019, , 123-146 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 22 | Awareness of Social Cues 2019, , 201-213 | | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 23 | Consumption Stereotypes and Impression Management: Food Choice 2019, , 95-121 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 24 | Are there different types of dieters? A review of personality and dietary restraint | 2.7 | 36 | Citations (PDF) |
| 25 | Self-reported overeating and attributions for food intake | 2.7 | 13 | Citations (PDF) |
| 26 | Restrained Eating and Food Cues: Recent Findings and Conclusions | 9.9 | 54 | Citations (PDF) |
| 27 | The persistence of and resistance to social norms regarding the appropriate amount to Eat: A preliminary investigation | 2.7 | 12 | Citations (PDF) |
| 28 | Hunger, taste, and normative cues in predictions about food intake | 2.7 | 14 | Citations (PDF) |
| 29 | What’s that you’re eating? Social comparison and eating behavior | 3.9 | 17 | Citations (PDF) |
| 30 | Conflicting internal and external eating cues: Impact on food intake and attributions. | 3.0 | 16 | Citations (PDF) |
| 31 | Spiral Model of Dieting and Disordered Eating 2017, , 791-793 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 32 | Contextual cue exposure effects on food intake in restrained eaters | 2.4 | 14 | Citations (PDF) |
| 33 | What does it mean to eat an appropriate amount of food? | 2.3 | 12 | Citations (PDF) |
| 34 | The role of expectations in the effect of food cue exposure on intake | 2.7 | 19 | Citations (PDF) |
| 35 | Are large portions responsible for the obesity epidemic? | 2.4 | 27 | Citations (PDF) |
| 36 | “She got more than me”. Social comparison and the social context of eating | 2.7 | 40 | Citations (PDF) |
| 37 | Personality, perceived appropriateness, and acknowledgement of social influences on food intake | 2.6 | 24 | Citations (PDF) |
| 38 | The effect of portion size and unit size on food intake: Unit bias or segmentation effect? | 3.0 | 63 | Citations (PDF) |
| 39 | Mechanisms underlying the portion-size effect | 2.4 | 107 | Citations (PDF) |
| 40 | Modeling of food intake: a meta-analytic review | 0.4 | 123 | Citations (PDF) |
| 41 | Brides and young couples | 2.1 | 5 | Citations (PDF) |
| 42 | Spiral Model of Dieting and Disordered Eating 2015, , 1-3 | | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 43 | Rural Compared to Urban Home Community Settings as Predictors of First-Year Students’ Adjustment to University | 0.9 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 44 | The effect of portion size on food intake is robust to brief education and mindfulness exercises | 2.8 | 63 | Citations (PDF) |
| 45 | Eating behavior, restraint status, and BMI of individuals high and low in perceived self-regulatory success | 2.7 | 18 | Citations (PDF) |
| 46 | A twin study of differences in the response of plasma ghrelin to a milkshake preload in restrained eaters | 2.4 | 7 | Citations (PDF) |
| 47 | Models, monitoring, and the mind: Comments on Wansink and Chandon's “Slim by Design” | 6.1 | 12 | Citations (PDF) |
| 48 | Failure to report social influences on food intake: Lack of awareness or motivated denial? | 3.0 | 27 | Citations (PDF) |
| 49 | The four undergraduate years. Changes in weight, eating attitudes, and depression | 2.7 | 36 | Citations (PDF) |
| 50 | Can clear standards of appropriate intake reverse the obesity epidemic? Commentary on De Ridder et al. (2012) | 10.2 | 4 | Citations (PDF) |
| 51 | Social Models Provide a Norm of Appropriate Food Intake for Young Women | 2.5 | 67 | Citations (PDF) |
| 52 | The natural course of eating pathology in female university students | 2.3 | 18 | Citations (PDF) |
| 53 | Acquired differences in brain responses among monozygotic twins discordant for restrained eating | 2.4 | 20 | Citations (PDF) |
| 54 | Comparing live and remote models in eating conformity research | 2.3 | 52 | Citations (PDF) |
| 55 | A Longitudinal Study of Breadth and Intensity of Activity Involvement and the Transition to University | 3.1 | 32 | Citations (PDF) |
| 56 | Self‐Regulation and the Obesity Epidemic | 6.1 | 11 | Citations (PDF) |
| 57 | Academic achievement in first-year university: who maintains their high school average? | 3.7 | 64 | Citations (PDF) |
| 58 | Parental Divorce and First-Year Students' Transition to University: The Need to Include Baseline Data and Gender | 1.0 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 59 | The moderating effects of attachment style on students' experience of a transition to university group facilitation program. | 1.7 | 22 | Citations (PDF) |
| 60 | The effects of calorie information on food selection and intake | 3.1 | 62 | Citations (PDF) |
| 61 | Learning to Eat 2011, , 290-304 | | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 62 | Upward and Downward: Social Comparison Processing of Thin Idealized Media Images | 2.5 | 164 | Citations (PDF) |
| 63 | Restrained Eating in a World of Plenty 2010, , 135-146 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 64 | Inaccessible food cues affect stress and weight gain in calorically-restricted and ad lib fed rats | 2.7 | 2 | Citations (PDF) |
| 65 | Getting a bigger slice of the pie. Effects on eating and emotion in restrained and unrestrained eaters | 2.7 | 48 | Citations (PDF) |
| 66 | Sex and Gender Differences in Eating Behavior 2010, , 455-469 | | 30 | Citations (PDF) |
| 67 | The Processing of Thin Ideals in Fashion Magazines: A Source of Social Comparison or Fantasy? | 0.8 | 126 | Citations (PDF) |
| 68 | The Student Perception of University Support and Structure Scale:development and validation | 3.4 | 22 | Citations (PDF) |
| 69 | Effects of Resolving to Change One's Own Behavior: Expectations vs. Experience | 3.4 | 9 | Citations (PDF) |
| 70 | Genetic and environmental influences on restrained eating behavior | 4.5 | 22 | Citations (PDF) |
| 71 | Se restreindre dans un environnement d’abondance alimentaire. Les effets des stimuli alimentaires sur la consommation et le poids | 0.1 | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 72 | Who gains or who loses weight? Psychosocial factors among first-year university students | 2.4 | 52 | Citations (PDF) |
| 73 | Wake up and smell the cookies. Effects of olfactory food-cue exposure in restrained and unrestrained eaters | 2.7 | 61 | Citations (PDF) |
| 74 | Perceived healthiness of food. If it's healthy, you can eat more! | 2.7 | 253 | Citations (PDF) |
| 75 | Internal and external moderators of the effect of variety on food intake. | 13.8 | 122 | Citations (PDF) |
| 76 | Helping out or hanging out: the features of involvement and how it relates to university adjustment | 3.7 | 30 | Citations (PDF) |
| 77 | Judgments of body weight based on food intake: A pervasive cognitive bias among restrained eaters | 4.5 | 15 | Citations (PDF) |
| 78 | Effects of food-cue exposure on dieting-related goals: A limitation to counteractive-control theory | 2.7 | 13 | Citations (PDF) |
| 79 | Caloric restriction in the presence of attractive food cues: External cues, eating, and weight | 2.4 | 72 | Citations (PDF) |
| 80 | External cues in the control of food intake in humans: The sensory-normative distinction | 2.4 | 173 | Citations (PDF) |
| 81 | “Just looking at food makes me gain weight”: Experimental induction of thought–shape fusion in eating-disordered and non-eating-disordered women | 4.1 | 51 | Citations (PDF) |
| 82 | An Intervention to Modify Expectations of Unrealistic Rewards from Thinness | 4.0 | 8 | Citations (PDF) |
| 83 | The Transition to University | 3.0 | 22 | Citations (PDF) |
| 84 | Undereating or eliminating overeating? | 4.4 | 22 | Citations (PDF) |
| 85 | Weight Cycling as an Instance of False Hope 2008, , 105-115 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 86 | The Importance of Friends | 3.0 | 278 | Citations (PDF) |
| 87 | Effects of Exposure to Thin and Overweight Peers: Evidence of Social Comparison in Restrained and Unrestrained Eaters | 0.8 | 34 | Citations (PDF) |
| 88 | A prospective investigation of the relations among cognitive dietary restraint, subclinical ovulatory disturbances, physical activity, and bone mass in healthy young women | 5.4 | 27 | Citations (PDF) |
| 89 | Consumption stereotypes and impression management: How you are what you eat | 2.7 | 293 | Citations (PDF) |
| 90 | A prospective investigation of the relations among cognitive dietary restraint, subclinical ovulatory disturbances, physical activity, and bone mass in healthy young women | 5.4 | 14 | Citations (PDF) |
| 91 | Self-Change in a Broader Context: Beyond Alcohol and Drugs 2007, , 102-149 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 92 | An evolutionary perspective on dieting | 2.7 | 48 | Citations (PDF) |
| 93 | Selective carbohydrate or protein restriction: Effects on subsequent food intake and cravings | 2.7 | 34 | Citations (PDF) |
| 94 | Does regulatory focus play a role in dietary restraint? | 2.3 | 25 | Citations (PDF) |
| 95 | Restrained and Unrestrained Eaters' Attributions of Success and Failure to Body Weight and Perception of Social Consensus: The Special Case of Romantic Success | 0.8 | 15 | Citations (PDF) |
| 96 | Effects of exposure to unrealistic promises about dieting: Are unrealistic expectations about dieting inspirational? | 4.5 | 16 | Citations (PDF) |
| 97 | The effect of deprivation on food cravings and eating behavior in restrained and unrestrained eaters | 4.5 | 214 | Citations (PDF) |
| 98 | La santé mentale et les comportements alimentaires: Une relation bidirectionnelle | 1.9 | 31 | Citations (PDF) |
| 99 | Normative influences on food intake | 2.4 | 248 | Citations (PDF) |
| 100 | Matching effects on eating: Do individual differences make a difference? | 2.7 | 50 | Citations (PDF) |
| 101 | Implicit and explicit attitudes toward fatness and thinness: The role of the internalization of societal standards | 5.2 | 82 | Citations (PDF) |
| 102 | Implicit cognitions and eating disorders: Their application in research and treatment | 2.3 | 36 | Citations (PDF) |
| 103 | Self-enhancing effects of exposure to thin-body images | 4.5 | 76 | Citations (PDF) |
| 104 | Accuracy in the estimation of body weight: An alternate test of the motivated-distortion hypothesis | 4.5 | 16 | Citations (PDF) |
| 105 | Sociocultural Idealization of Thin Female Body Shapes: An Introduction to the Special Issue on Body Image and Eating Disorders | 0.8 | 95 | Citations (PDF) |
| 106 | A word-stem completion task to assess implicit processing of appearance-related information | 2.0 | 40 | Citations (PDF) |
| 107 | Conformity and dietary disinhibition: A test of the ego-strength model of self-regulation | 4.5 | 90 | Citations (PDF) |
| 108 | The specificity of restrained versus unrestrained eaters' responses to food cues: general desire to eat, or craving for the cued food? | 2.7 | 314 | Citations (PDF) |
| 109 | The influence of social norms on hunger ratings and eating | 2.7 | 19 | Citations (PDF) |
| 110 | Effects of the Presence of Others on Food Intake: A Normative Interpretation. | 13.8 | 625 | Citations (PDF) |
| 111 | Realistic and Unrealistic Self-Change Efforts. | 4.4 | 8 | Citations (PDF) |
| 112 | Caged Women: Eating Disorders Revisited | 0.0 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 113 | Effects of Exposure to Thin Media Images: Evidence of Self-Enhancement among Restrained Eaters | 3.7 | 239 | Citations (PDF) |
| 114 | Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we diet: Effects of anticipated deprivation on food intake in restrained and unrestrained eaters. | 4.4 | 79 | Citations (PDF) |
| 115 | If at first you don't succeed: False hopes of self-change. | 4.4 | 259 | Citations (PDF) |
| 116 | Causes of Eating Disorders | 23.5 | 900 | Citations (PDF) |
| 117 | Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we diet: Effects of anticipated deprivation on food intake in restrained and unrestrained eaters. | 4.4 | 31 | Citations (PDF) |
| 118 | Self-presentational conflict in social eating situations: a normative perspective | 2.7 | 174 | Citations (PDF) |
| 119 | Weight-related and shape-related self-evaluation in eating-disordered and non-eating-disordered women | 4.5 | 45 | Citations (PDF) |
| 120 | Eating disorders, dieting, and the accuracy of self-reported weight | 4.5 | 101 | Citations (PDF) |
| 121 | The False-Hope Syndrome | 5.4 | 69 | Citations (PDF) |
| 122 | Help, Not Harm: Psychological Foundation for a Nondieting Approach Toward Health | 3.5 | 55 | Citations (PDF) |
| 123 | Distress and eating: Why do dieters overeat? 1999, 26, 153-164 | | 201 | Citations (PDF) |
| 124 | The effects of resolving to diet on restrained and unrestrained eaters: The ?false hope syndrome? 1999, 26, 434-447 | | 43 | Citations (PDF) |
| 125 | Effects of Attentional Focus on Subjective Hunger Ratings | 2.7 | 16 | Citations (PDF) |
| 126 | Weight gain after smoking cessation in women: The impact of dieting status 1998, 24, 53-64 | | 28 | Citations (PDF) |
| 127 | Behavioral Inhibition: Where Are We and Where Should We Be Heading? | 2.2 | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 128 | The Effects of Behavioral Inhibition: Integrating Internal Cues, Cognition, Behavior, and Affect | 2.2 | 134 | Citations (PDF) |
| 129 | Effects of false weight feedback on mood, self-evaluation, and food intake in restrained and unrestrained eaters. | 4.4 | 58 | Citations (PDF) |
| 130 | The Effect of Pre-exposure to Food Cues on the Eating Behavior of Restrained and Unrestrained Eaters | 2.7 | 416 | Citations (PDF) |
| 131 | Psychological Consequences of Food Restriction | 1.2 | 375 | Citations (PDF) |
| 132 | Self-Regulation Failure: Can Failure Be Successful? | 2.2 | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 133 | What does abnormal eating tell us about normal eating? 1996, , 207-238 | | 17 | Citations (PDF) |
| 134 | Coprophagia as a manifestation of obsessive-compulsive disorder: A case report | 1.9 | 27 | Citations (PDF) |
| 135 | Hunger-induced finickiness in humans | 2.7 | 36 | Citations (PDF) |
| 136 | Social Facilitation of Eating Among Friends and Strangers | 2.7 | 184 | Citations (PDF) |
| 137 | Food restriction and binge eating: A study of former prisoners of war. | 4.4 | 112 | Citations (PDF) |
| 138 | Effects of anxiety on eating: Does palatability moderate distress-induced overeating in dieters? | 4.4 | 153 | Citations (PDF) |
| 139 | Self-Awareness, Task Failure, and Disinhibition: How Attentional Focus Affects Eating | 3.4 | 67 | Citations (PDF) |
| 140 | Differences between depressed and nondepressed individuals in the recognition of and response to facial emotional cues. | 4.4 | 231 | Citations (PDF) |
| 141 | Effects of distress on eating: The importance of ego-involvement. | 6.2 | 56 | Citations (PDF) |
| 142 | Undieting: A program to help people stop dieting | 4.5 | 124 | Citations (PDF) |
| 143 | Is the effect of a social model on eating attenuated by hunger? | 2.7 | 122 | Citations (PDF) |
| 144 | Restraint, weight loss, and variability of body weight. | 4.4 | 129 | Citations (PDF) |
| 145 | Good and bad dieters: Self-perception and reaction to a dietary challenge | 4.5 | 20 | Citations (PDF) |
| 146 | Cognitive aspects of dietary restraint: Effects on person memory | 4.5 | 43 | Citations (PDF) |
| 147 | Effects of physical threat and ego threat on eating behavior. | 6.2 | 311 | Citations (PDF) |
| 148 | Development and validation of a scale for measuring state self-esteem. | 6.2 | 1,487 | Citations (PDF) |
| 149 | Self-Predictions of Emotional Response Patterns: Age, Sex, and Situational Determinants | 4.0 | 16 | Citations (PDF) |
| 150 | Dietary restraint: Some current findings and speculations. | 2.8 | 29 | Citations (PDF) |
| 151 | Self-Predictions of Emotional Response Patterns: Age, Sex, and Situational Determinants | 4.0 | 16 | Citations (PDF) |
| 152 | From dietary restraint to binge eating: Attaching causes to effects | 2.7 | 50 | Citations (PDF) |
| 153 | Dietary restraint and binge eating: Response to Charnock | 5.6 | 11 | Citations (PDF) |
| 154 | Restraint and internal responsiveness: Effects of placebo manipulations of hunger state on eating. | 4.4 | 68 | Citations (PDF) |
| 155 | The (mis)measurement of restraint: An analysis of conceptual and psychometric issues. | 4.4 | 343 | Citations (PDF) |
| 156 | Self-esteem, restraint, and eating behavior. | 4.4 | 178 | Citations (PDF) |
| 157 | Anxiety, hunger, and eating behavior. | 4.4 | 116 | Citations (PDF) |
| 158 | Diagnosis and treatment of normal eating. | 4.2 | 322 | Citations (PDF) |
| 159 | Food perception in dieters and non-dieters | 2.7 | 51 | Citations (PDF) |
| 160 | The illusion of counter-regulation | 2.7 | 63 | Citations (PDF) |
| 161 | The effects of self-attention and public attention on eating in restrained and unrestrained subjects. | 6.2 | 113 | Citations (PDF) |
| 162 | Dieting and binging reexamined: A response to Lowe. | 4.4 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 163 | Dieting and binging: A causal analysis. | 4.4 | 1,256 | Citations (PDF) |
| 164 | Dieting and binging: A causal analysis. | 4.4 | 460 | Citations (PDF) |
| 165 | A Counselor's Guide to Eating Disorders | 0.0 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 166 | Comparison Between Weight-Preoccupied Women and Anorexia Nervosa | 2.3 | 225 | Citations (PDF) |
| 167 | Development and validation of a multidimensional eating disorder inventory for anorexia nervosa and bulimia | 4.5 | 3,904 | Citations (PDF) |
| 168 | Book review | 2.7 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 169 | A conical model for the taxonomy of emotional experience. | 6.2 | 97 | Citations (PDF) |
| 170 | Obesity, externality, and susceptibility to social influence: An integrated analysis. | 6.2 | 33 | Citations (PDF) |
| 171 | A Boundary Model for the Regulation of Eating | 0.4 | 99 | Citations (PDF) |
| 172 | Weight Change and Dietary Concern in the Overweight: Are they Really independent? | 2.7 | 11 | Citations (PDF) |
| 173 | Human obesity, dieting, and anticipatory salivation to food | 2.4 | 124 | Citations (PDF) |
| 174 | Salivation in Dieters and Don-dieters | 2.7 | 32 | Citations (PDF) |
| 175 | On the induction of emotion in the laboratory: Discrete moods or multiple affect states? | 6.2 | 137 | Citations (PDF) |
| 176 | On the induction of emotion in the laboratory: Discrete moods or multiple affect states? | 6.2 | 69 | Citations (PDF) |
| 177 | Laboratory induction of mood states through the reading of self-referent mood statements: Affective changes or demand characteristics? | 4.4 | 151 | Citations (PDF) |
| 178 | Short-term intake of overweight individuals and normal weight dieters and non-dieters with and without choice among a variety of foods | 2.7 | 76 | Citations (PDF) |
| 179 | The Effect of Perceived Smoking Status on Attractiveness | 3.7 | 19 | Citations (PDF) |
| 180 | Effects of an observer on eating behavior: The induction of "sensible" eating1 | 3.4 | 83 | Citations (PDF) |
| 181 | Effects of a model on eating behavior: The induction of a restrained eating style1 | 3.4 | 116 | Citations (PDF) |
| 182 | Functions of Fat | 0.0 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 183 | Internal and external components of emotionality in restrained and unrestrained eaters. | 4.4 | 165 | Citations (PDF) |
| 184 | PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF MASTECTOMY ON A WOMANʼS FEMININE SELF-CONCEPT | 1.1 | 122 | Citations (PDF) |
| 185 | Perception of calories and regulation of intake in restrained and unrestrained subjects | 3.3 | 199 | Citations (PDF) |
| 186 | The effects of alcohol on eating behavior: Disinhibition or sedation? | 3.3 | 83 | Citations (PDF) |
| 187 | Clinical depression and weight change: A complex relation. | 4.4 | 101 | Citations (PDF) |
| 188 | Effects of delay, attack, and retaliation on state depression and hostility. | 4.4 | 29 | Citations (PDF) |
| 189 | Alcohol and tension reduction: Cognitive and physiological effects. | 4.4 | 72 | Citations (PDF) |
| 190 | Effects of alcohol on eating behavior: Influence of mood and perceived intoxication. | 4.4 | 153 | Citations (PDF) |
| 191 | Anxiety, restraint, and eating behavior. | 4.4 | 735 | Citations (PDF) |
| 192 | Depression: Masked and Unmasked | 0.0 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 193 | Psychological reactions to hysterectomy: A critical review | 1.3 | 66 | Citations (PDF) |