Dayna L. Sherry
Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre
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Publication
Featured researches published by Dayna L. Sherry.
Journal of Counseling Psychology | 2011
Sean P. Mackinnon; Simon B. Sherry; Aislin R. Graham; Sherry H. Stewart; Dayna L. Sherry; Stephanie L. Allen; Skye Fitzpatrick; Daniel S. McGrath
The perfectionism model of binge eating (PMOBE) is an integrative model explaining why perfectionism is related to binge eating. This study reformulates and tests the PMOBE, with a focus on addressing limitations observed in the perfectionism and binge-eating literature. In the reformulated PMOBE, concern over mistakes is seen as a destructive aspect of perfectionism contributing to a cycle of binge eating via 4 binge-eating maintenance variables: interpersonal discrepancies, low interpersonal esteem, depressive affect, and dietary restraint. This test of the reformulated PMOBE involved 200 undergraduate women studied using a 3-wave longitudinal design. As hypothesized, concern over mistakes appears to represent a vulnerability factor for binge eating. Bootstrapped tests of mediation suggested concern over mistakes contributes to binge eating through binge-eating maintenance variables, and results supported the incremental validity of the reformulated PMOBE beyond perfectionistic strivings and neuroticism. The reformulated PMOBE also predicted binge eating, but not binge drinking, supporting the specificity of this model. The reformulated PMOBE offers a framework for understanding how key contributors to binge eating work together to generate and to maintain binge eating.
Addictive Behaviors | 2013
Aislin R. Mushquash; Sherry H. Stewart; Simon B. Sherry; Dayna L. Sherry; Christopher J. Mushquash; Anna L. MacKinnon
Heavy episodic drinking is increasingly common among undergraduate women. Cross-sectional research suggests that depressive symptoms and heavy episodic drinking are related. Nonetheless, surprisingly little is known about whether depressive symptoms are an antecedent of heavy episodic drinking, a consequence of heavy episodic drinking, or both. Such knowledge is essential to the accurate conceptualization of heavy episodic drinking, depressive symptoms, and their interrelations. In the present short-term longitudinal study, depressive symptoms and heavy episodic drinking were proposed to reciprocally influence each other over time, with depressive symptoms predicting changes in heavy episodic drinking over 1 week and vice versa. This reciprocal relations model was tested in 200 undergraduate women using a 4-wave, 4-week longitudinal design. Structural equation modeling was used to conduct cross-lagged analyses testing reciprocal relations between depressive symptoms and heavy episodic drinking. Consistent with hypotheses, both depressive symptoms and heavy episodic drinking were temporally stable, and depressive symptoms predicted changes in heavy episodic drinking over 1 week. Contrary to hypotheses, heavy episodic drinking did not predict changes in depressive symptoms over 1 week. Results are consistent with a vulnerability model suggesting depressive symptoms leave undergraduate women vulnerable to heavy episodic drinking. For undergraduate women who are struggling with feelings of sadness, worthlessness, and hopelessness, heavy episodic drinking may provide a temporary yet maladaptive means of avoiding or alleviating depressive symptoms.
Body Image | 2009
Simon B. Sherry; Jennifer Vriend; Paul L. Hewitt; Dayna L. Sherry; Gordon L. Flett; Andrea A. Wardrop
The present study examined the relationship between a self-presentational style involving an extreme need to conceal perceived imperfections from others and body image disturbance (BID). Findings from both a community and a university sample indicated that nondisplay of imperfection (i.e., concerns over behavioral displays of imperfections to others) predicted BID beyond self-imposed perfectionistic expectations and other contributors to BID. Mediational analyses suggested that dysfunctional appearance schemas represent one possible mechanism through which nondisplay of imperfection influences BID. In contrast to earlier work on perfectionism and BID, which emphasized the role of self-imposed perfectionistic expectations, the current study offers a novel view of the connection between perfectionism and BID. That is, rather than striving to achieve perfection, the present study suggests that individuals with BID are characterized by a strong need to avoid appearing imperfect to others.
Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy | 2015
Chantal M. Gautreau; Simon B. Sherry; Dayna L. Sherry; Kathryn A. Birnie; Sean P. Mackinnon; Sherry H. Stewart
BACKGROUND Health anxiety is common, impairing, and costly. The role of catastrophizing of bodily sensations (i.e. rumination about, overconcern with, and intolerance of bodily sensations) in maintaining health-related anxiety (i.e. anxiety about perceived health problems) is important, but understudied, in the health anxiety literature. AIMS The present study investigates the role of catastrophizing of bodily sensations as a maintenance factor for health-related anxiety over time. METHOD Undergraduates (n = 226 women; n = 226 men) completed a baseline assessment, 14-day daily diary study, and 14-day longitudinal follow-up. RESULTS Path analysis indicated catastrophizing of bodily sensations maintains health-related anxiety from one month to the next in both men and women. CONCLUSIONS The present study bridges an important gap between theory and evidence. Results support cognitive behavioral theories and extend cross-sectional research asserting catastrophizing of bodily sensations maintains health-related anxiety over time. A cyclical, self-perpetuating pattern was observed in the present study wherein catastrophizing of bodily sensations and health-related anxiety contribute to one another over time. Results also suggest targeting catastrophizing of bodily sensations may reduce health-related anxiety.
Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science | 2010
Simon B. Sherry; Paul L. Hewitt; Dayna L. Sherry; Gordon L. Flett; Aislin R. Graham
Journal of Counseling Psychology | 2010
Aislin R. Graham; Simon B. Sherry; Sherry H. Stewart; Dayna L. Sherry; Daniel S. McGrath; Kristin M. Fossum; Stephanie L. Allen
Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science | 2012
Daniel S. McGrath; Simon B. Sherry; Sherry H. Stewart; Aislin R. Mushquash; Stephanie L. Allen; Logan J. Nealis; Dayna L. Sherry
Journal of Family Psychology | 2012
Sean P. Mackinnon; Simon B. Sherry; Martin M. Antony; Sherry H. Stewart; Dayna L. Sherry; Nikola Hartling
Psychology of Addictive Behaviors | 2013
Aislin R. Mushquash; Sherry H. Stewart; Simon B. Sherry; Sean P. Mackinnon; Martin M. Antony; Dayna L. Sherry
Personality and Individual Differences | 2014
Simon B. Sherry; Tara M. Gralnick; Paul L. Hewitt; Dayna L. Sherry; Gordon L. Flett