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Featured researches published by Ingo W. Nader.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2011

Gene–environment interaction in anorexia nervosa: relevance of non-shared environment and the serotonin transporter gene

Andreas Karwautz; Gudrun Wagner; Karin Waldherr; Ingo W. Nader; Fernando Fernández-Aranda; Xavier Estivill; J. Holliday; David A. Collier; Janet Treasure

Gene–environment interaction in anorexia nervosa: relevance of non-shared environment and the serotonin transporter gene


Journal of Clinical Psychology | 2013

Investigating the Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ): Construction of a Short Form and Evidence of a Two-Factor Higher Order Structure of Mindfulness

Ulrich S. Tran; Tobias M. Glück; Ingo W. Nader

OBJECTIVES Past research of the Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ) lacks clear results regarding its factorial validity, item fitting, mindfulness in the general population, and on the higher order structure of mindfulness. We derived an alternative two-factor higher order structure for the FFMQ, delineating the attentional and experiential aspects of mindfulness. METHOD Data of 640 persons from the Austrian community were used for primary analyses, and data of 333 Austrian students were used for cross-validation. Confirmatory analyses and exploratory structural equation modeling (ESEM) were utilized to investigate psychometric and structural properties. Associations with related variables and indicators of mental health were examined. RESULTS Confirmatory models fitted only poorly on the full 39-item FFMQ. Fit was acceptable in an abridged 20-item version in both samples. The Nonreact scale had only weak psychometric properties. ESEM analyses suggested a good fit of two higher order factors and revealed structural differences between the samples. Beneficial effects of mindfulness appeared to be uniquely associated with the experiential aspects of mindfulness. Strategies of emotion regulation showed differential associations with the two higher order factors in the two samples. CONCLUSIONS Our findings are relevant both with regard to conceptual issues on mindfulness and the assessment of mindfulness with the FFMQ. Replications in meditating samples and in patients are needed.


Journal of Personality Assessment | 2012

Further Investigation of the Validity and Reliability of the Photographic Figure Rating Scale for Body Image Assessment

Viren Swami; Stefan Stieger; Amy Sunshine Harris; Ingo W. Nader; Jakob Pietschnig; Martin Voracek; Martin J. Tovée

Previous studies have not fully investigated the psychometric properties of the Photographic Figure Rating Scale (PFRS). In 2 studies, we report on the test–retest reliability and convergent validity of ratings derived from the PFRS. In Study 1, 322 female university students in Britain provided self-ratings on the PFRS and objectively measured body mass index (BMI); a subsample of 132 women also completed the task after 5 weeks. In Study 2, 243 women from the community in Austria completed the PFRS along with a battery of other body image scales. Results of Study 1 showed that ratings on the PFRS had good test–retest reliability (all rs > .87) and good convergent validity in relation to BMI. Results of Study 2 showed that PFRS-derived body dissatisfaction scores were significantly correlated with a range of body image variables. These results provide evidence for the convergent validity and good test–retest reliability of the PFRS.


Addiction Research & Theory | 2014

Pathological Internet use – It is a multidimensional and not a unidimensional construct

Mirko Pawlikowski; Ingo W. Nader; Christoph Burger; Stefan Stieger; Matthias Brand

It is still a topic of debate whether pathological Internet use (PIU) is a distinct entity or whether it should be differentiated between pathological use of specific Internet activities like playing Internet games and spending time on Internet sex sites. The aim of the current study was to contribute to a better understanding of common and differential aspects of PIU in relation to different specific Internet activities. Three groups of individuals were examined which differed with respect to their use of specific Internet activities: one group of 69 subjects used exclusively Internet games (IG) (but not Internet pornography (IP)), 134 subjects used IP (but not IG), and 116 subjects used both IG and IP (i.e., unspecific Internet use). The results indicate that shyness and life satisfaction are significant predictors for a tendency towards pathological use of IG, but not pathological use of IP. Time spent online was a significant predictor for problematic use of both IG and IP. Additionally, no correlation was found between symptoms of pathological use of IG and IP. We conclude that games may be used to compensate social deficits (e.g., shyness) and life satisfaction in real life, whereas IP is primarily used for gratification in terms of achieving stimulation and sexual arousal. These results support the demand for differentiating the various facets of Internet use in future studies instead of considering PIU as a unitary phenomenon.


European Eating Disorders Review | 2012

Internalizing and externalizing behaviour problems in childhood contribute to the development of anorexia and bulimia nervosa-a study comparing sister pairs

Mandana Adambegan; Gudrun Wagner; Ingo W. Nader; Fernando Fernández-Aranda; Janet Treasure; Andreas Karwautz

OBJECTIVE We wanted to clarify whether there is any clinically relevant behavioural psychopathology in patients before onset of an eating disorder (ED) compared with their healthy sisters and if there are differences in behavioural problems between the ED subtypes anorexia nervosa-restricting type (AN-R) and EDs with bulimic behaviour. METHOD Behavioural psychopathology was examined by parental report using the Child Behaviour Checklist retrospectively in 83 sister pairs discordant for an ED (37 with AN-R and 46 with bulimic EDs) by means of conditional logistic regression. RESULTS Participants who later developed an ED had significantly higher internalizing and externalizing behavioural abnormality scores before onset of the ED than their unaffected sisters. Conditional logistic regression revealed significantly higher internalizing behaviour scores in AN-R and significantly higher internalizing and externalizing scores in the bulimic disorders. DISCUSSION Internalizing problems (anxiety, depression and somatization) preceded the development of AN, whereas both internalizing and externalizing behaviour problems (aggressive and delinquent behaviour) preceded bulimic disorders.


Scandinavian Journal of Psychology | 2013

Body image and personality: Associations between the Big Five Personality Factors, actual-ideal weight discrepancy, and body appreciation

Viren Swami; Ulrich S. Tran; Louise Hoffmann Brooks; Laura Kanaan; Ellen-Marlene Luesse; Ingo W. Nader; Jakob Pietschnig; Stefan Stieger; Martin Voracek

Studies have suggested associations between personality dimensions and body image constructs, but these have not been conclusively established. In two studies, we examined direct associations between the Big Five dimensions and two body image constructs, actual-ideal weight discrepancy and body appreciation. In Study 1, 950 women completed measures of both body image constructs and a brief measure of the Big Five dimensions. In Study 2,339 women completed measures of the body image constructs and a more reliable measure of the Big Five. Both studies showed that Neuroticism was significantly associated with actual-ideal weight discrepancy (positively) and body appreciation (negatively) once the effects of body mass index and social status had been accounted for. These results are consistent with the suggestion that Neuroticism is a trait of public health significance requiring attention by body image scholars.


Psychological Reports | 2012

Personality differences between tattooed and non-tattooed individuals

Viren Swami; Jakob Pietschnig; Bianca Bertl; Ingo W. Nader; Stefan Stieger; Martin Voracek

This study examined differences between tattooed and non-tattooed individuals on a range of personality and individual difference measures. A community sample of 540 individuals from the southern German-speaking area of central Europe completed a survey consisting of measures of the Big Five personality factors, Need for Uniqueness, Self-esteem, sensation seeking, Religious and Spiritual Beliefs, Attitudes Toward Tattoos, tattoo possession, and demographics. Preliminary analyses showed that 22% of the total sample possessed at least one tattoo. Further analyses showed that, compared with non-tattooed (n = 420) individuals, tattooed participants (n = 120) had significantly higher scores on Extraversion, Experience Seeking, Need for Uniqueness, and held more positive Attitudes Toward Tattoos, although effect sizes of these group differences were generally small- to medium-sized. These results are considered in relation to the contemporary prevalence of tattoos in socioeconomically developed societies.


Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2012

Predictors of Suicide and Suicide Attempt in Subway Stations: A Population-based Ecological Study

Thomas Niederkrotenthaler; Gernot Sonneck; Kanita Dervic; Ingo W. Nader; Martin Voracek; Nestor D. Kapusta; Elmar Etzersdorfer; Ellenor Mittendorfer-Rutz; Thomas Dörner

Suicidal behavior on the subway often involves young people and has a considerable impact on public life, but little is known about factors associated with suicides and suicide attempts in specific subway stations. Between 1979 and 2009, 185 suicides and 107 suicide attempts occurred on the subway in Vienna, Austria. Station-specific suicide and suicide attempt rates (defined as the frequency of suicidal incidents per time period) were modeled as the outcome variables in bivariate and multivariate Poisson regression models. Structural station characteristics (presence of a surveillance unit, train types used, and construction on street level versus other construction), contextual station characteristics (neighborhood to historical sites, size of the catchment area, and in operation during time period of extensive media reporting on subway suicides), and passenger-based characteristics (number of passengers getting on the trains per day, use as meeting point by drug users, and socioeconomic status of the population in the catchment area) were used as the explanatory variables. In the multivariate analyses, subway suicides increased when stations were served by the faster train type. Subway suicide attempts increased with the daily number of passengers getting on the trains and with the stations’ use as meeting points by drug users. The findings indicate that there are some differences between subway suicides and suicide attempts. Completed suicides seem to vary most with train type used. Suicide attempts seem to depend mostly on passenger-based characteristics, specifically on the station’s crowdedness and on its use as meeting point by drug users. Suicide-preventive interventions should concentrate on crowded stations and on stations frequented by risk groups.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Suicide seasonality: Complex demodulation as a novel approach in epidemiologic analysis

Ingo W. Nader; Jakob Pietschnig; Thomas Niederkrotenthaler; Nestor D. Kapusta; Gernot Sonneck; Martin Voracek

Background Seasonality of suicides is well-known and nearly ubiquitous, but recent evidence showed inconsistent patterns of decreasing or increasing seasonality in different countries. Furthermore, strength of seasonality was hypothesized to be associated with suicide prevalence. This study aimed at pointing out methodological difficulties in examining changes in suicide seasonality. Methododology/Principal Findings The present study examines the hypothesis of decreasing seasonality with a superior method that allows continuous modeling of seasonality. Suicides in Austria (1970–2008, N = 67,741) were analyzed with complex demodulation, a local (point-in-time specific) version of harmonic analysis. This avoids the need to arbitrarily split the time series, as is common practice in the field of suicide seasonality research, and facilitates incorporating the association with suicide prevalence. Regression models were used to assess time trends and association of amplitude and absolute suicide numbers. Results showed that strength of seasonality was associated with absolute suicide numbers, and that strength of seasonality was stable during the study period when this association was taken into account. Conclusion/Significance Continuous modeling of suicide seasonality with complex demodulation avoids spurious findings that can result when time series are segmented and analyzed piecewise or when the association with suicide prevalence is disregarded.


Archives of Oral Biology | 2010

Chew on this: No support for facilitating effects of gum on spatial task performance.

Ingo W. Nader; Georg Gittler; Karin Waldherr; Jakob Pietschnig

OBJECTIVE To determine whether chewing of gum facilitates spatial task performance in healthy participants, two behavioral experiments were performed. DESIGN In the first experiment, spatial task performance of 349 men and women preceding and after treatment administration (saccharated chewing gum, sugar-free chewing gum, no chewing gum) was assessed using effect modeling by means of Item Response Theory. In the second experiment, another 100 participants were either administered sugar-free chewing gum or no chewing gum during spatial task performance. Effects of gum in the second study were assessed by standard means of data analysis. RESULTS Results indicated no significant effects of either chewing gum or sugar on spatial task performance in either experiment. CONCLUSIONS Our findings are consistent with recent studies investigating the influences of chewing gum on various memory functions, extending them by another measure of cognitive ability. Thus, further doubt is cast on enhancing effects of chewing gum on cognitive task performance.

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Viren Swami

Anglia Ruskin University

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Gernot Sonneck

Medical University of Vienna

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Nestor D. Kapusta

Medical University of Vienna

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