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Dive into the research topics where Laura Canetti is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura Canetti.


Behavioural Processes | 2002

Food and emotion

Laura Canetti; Eytan Bachar; Elliot M. Berry

The relationship between eating and emotion has always interested researchers of human behavior. This relationship varies according to the particular characteristics of the individual and according to the specific emotional state. We consider findings on the reciprocal interactions between, on the one hand, emotions and food intake, and, on the other, the psychological and emotional consequences of losing weight and dieting. Theories on the relationship between emotions and eating behaviors have their origin in the literature on obesity. The psychosomatic theory of obesity proposes that eating may reduce anxiety, and that the obese overeat in order to reduce discomfort. The internal/external theory of obesity hypothesizes that overweight people do not recognize physiological cues of hunger or satiety because of faulty learning. It thus predicts that normal weight people will alter (either increase or decrease) their eating when stressed, while obese people will eat regardless of their physiological state. The restraint hypothesis postulates that people who chronically restrict their food intake overeat in the presence of disinhibitors such as the perception of having overeaten, alcohol or stress. These theories are examined in the light of present research and their implications on eating disorders are presented.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 2009

Psychosocial predictors of weight loss and psychological adjustment following bariatric surgery and a weight-loss program: the mediating role of emotional eating.

Laura Canetti; Elliot M. Berry; Yoel Elizur

OBJECTIVE To examine a structural equation model of the effects of personal and interpersonal factors on treatment outcome of bariatric surgery and weight-loss program. METHOD Forty-four participants of the surgery group and 47 participants of the diet group completed questionnaires before treatment and 1 year afterward. Predictor measures are as follows: social support, motivation for control, sense of control, self-esteem, neuroticism, fear of intimacy, and emotional eating (EE). OUTCOME MEASURES Weight loss, quality of life, and mental health. RESULTS Neurotic predisposition (NP), a latent variable indicated by neuroticism, low self-esteem, and fear of intimacy, had an effect on weight loss that was fully mediated by EE. NP also had an effect on quality of life improvement that was fully mediated by EE and weight loss in both treatment groups. DISCUSSION Both NP and EE predict outcome of obesity treatments, but EE is the more proximal variable that mediates the effect of NP.


Contemporary Family Therapy | 2002

Attachment Style and Family Functioning as Discriminating Factors in Eating Disorders

Yael Latzer; Zipora Hochdorf; Eitan Bachar; Laura Canetti

This study sought to examine the extent to which family environment and attachment styles are concurrently related to eating disorders. The Adult Attachment Scale and the Family Environment Scale were administered to 25 anorexic and 33 bulimic female patients at intake in an eating disorder clinic, and 37 age-matched female controls. Eating disorder patients were found to be less secure, more avoidant, and more anxious than controls. The families of eating disorder patients were found to be less cohesive, expressive, and encouraging of personal growth than were controls. Low encouragement of personal growth and uncertain attachment styles may be manifestations of family difficulties in supporting the child during the process of separation individuation, and exploration of the outside world.


Journal of Clinical Psychology | 2008

Anorexia nervosa and parental bonding: the contribution of parent-grandparent relationships to eating disorder psychopathology.

Laura Canetti; Kyra Kanyas; Bernard Lerer; Yael Latzer; Eytan Bachar

The present study adopted an intergenerational approach in examining the association between parental bonding and anorexia nervosa. Forty-three anorexic participants and 33 nonclinical comparison participants completed eating disorder questionnaires and the Parental Bonding Instrument (PBI). The participants parents also completed the PBI. The anorexic participants perceived both parents as less caring and fathers as more controlling than nonclinical participants. Among anorexic participants, mother control and father care were associated with symptom severity. Intergenerational effects were present. Among anorexic participants, maternal grandmother care was associated with eating disorder psychopathology. The present findings suggest that parental characteristics of grandparents might play a role in the development of eating disorders in granddaughters.


Journal of The European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology | 2010

Well being, psychopathology and coping strategies in psoriasis compared with atopic dermatitis: a controlled study

V Leibovici; Laura Canetti; S Yahalomi; R Cooper-Kazaz; O Bonne; A Ingber; Eytan Bachar

Background  There is a vast literature describing the association between psoriasis, atopic dermatitis (AD) and psychological distress. Some of these studies were uncontrolled and others used non‐dermatological diseases as control, but only a few used chronic skin diseases as controls.


Child Psychiatry & Human Development | 1999

Childhood imaginary companionship and mental health in adolescence

Omer Bonne; Laura Canetti; Eytan Bachar; Atara Kaplan De-Nour; Arieh Y. Shalev

An imaginary companion (IC) is a frequently encountered childhood fantasy, invisible to anyone but the child, who may be named, addressed or played with. Whether the presence of an IC is a normal developmental feature has not been determined. We examined psychometric measures and the presence/absence of childhood IC in a sample of 850 mentally healthy adolescents. 17.6% of our subjects, more often females, reported having had such a companion. Subjects who reported having had an IC in childhood exhibited higher levels of distress and emotional discontrol, displayed prolonged transitional object attachment and immature modes of coping with stress. Thus, although childhood imaginary companionship is not indicative of psychopathology, it may denote a vulnerability for adolescent perturbation and difficulty in coping with emotionally laden situations.


Child Psychiatry & Human Development | 1998

Childhood vs. Adolescence Transitional Object Attachment, and Its Relation to Mental Health and Parental Bonding

Eytan Bachar; Laura Canetti; Esti Galilee-Weisstub; Atara Kaplan-DeNour; Arieh Y. Shalev

Abstract871 participants, 375 boys and 496 girls, mean age 16.7 + 1, were administered the Parental Bonding Instrument (P.B.I.), the Brief Symptom Inventory (B.S.I.), the General Well-Being Questionnaire (G.W.B.) and the Chestnut Lodge Transitional Object Scale. Results supported Winnicotts theory: participants reporting attachment to a Transitional Object (T.O.) in their childhood reported significantly more optimal maternal bonding than participants who were not attached to a T.O. Participants reporting attachment to a T.O. in adolescence had significantly more psychiatric symptoms and less general well-being. Adolescence T.O. attachment might be considered a marker of mental distress in the general, normal population.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 1997

Psychological well-being and ratings of psychiatric symptoms in bereaved Israeli adolescents: differential effect of war-versus accident-related bereavement.

Eytan Bachar; Laura Canetti; Omer Bonne; Atara Kaplan De-Nour; Arieh Y. Shalev

Eight hundred seventy-one Israeli adolescents, 375 boys and 496 girls, mean age 16.7 +/- 1, participated in this study. Twenty-three of them lost relatives in war and 19 in road accidents. All participants were administered the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI), the General Well-being Scale (GWB), the Parental Bonding Instrument (PBI) and the Perceived Social Support-Family/Friend (PSS-Fa and PSS-Fr) measures. War-bereaved adolescents showed significantly higher scores in psychological well-being (GWB) and significantly lower scores in reported psychiatric symptoms (BSI) than accident-bereaved adolescents. War-bereaved adolescents also had significantly better BSI and GWB scores than the general nonbereaved adolescent population. These results persisted after controlling for family socio-economic status, gender, and the degrees of closeness of the deceased relative. War-bereaved adolescents did not differ either from accident-bereaved adolescents or from the nonbereaved general adolescent population in social and family support systems (PSS-Fr, PSS-Fa) and did not experience different basic parental attitudes (PBI). Results are discussed in terms of the different meanings ascribed to death in battle versus death in a road accident.


American Journal of Family Therapy | 2005

Attachment Styles and Attraction to Death: Diversities Among Eating Disorder Patients

Zipora Hochdorf; Yael Latzer; Laura Canetti; Eytan Bachar

The current research was aimed at examining how attachment styles are connected to attraction to death among eating disorder (ED) patients. A sample of 34 anorexic and 34 bulimic patients was matched by age, sex, and socioeconomic status to 37 normal controls. They were administered the Adult Attachment Scale, the Beck Depression Inventory, and the Multi-Attitude Suicidal Tendency Scale. Results show that ED patients scored significantly higher on the insecure attachment scale and were less attracted to and more repulsed by life than controls. No significant differences were found on death variables. A significant difference between the three attachment styles was found beyond depression. The results suggest a model that may explain the diversities of attachment styles and the relationship with death among ED patients. Insecure attachment style may explain the repulsion by life, while the illness itself may serve as a false “secure base” and may protect from the fear of death. Clinicians may thus attempt to replace the “illness secure base” by enriching the attraction to life.


European Eating Disorders Review | 2010

Selflessness and perfectionism as predictors of pathological eating attitudes and disorders: A longitudinal study.

Eytan Bachar; Eitan Gur; Laura Canetti; Elliot M. Berry; Dan J. Stein

This paper examines the role that selflessness and perfectionism may play as possible predictors of pathological eating attitudes and eating disorders (ED). 1057 schoolgirls (seventh to ninth grade) participated in the initial screening phase. They were administered the Eating Attitudes Test (EAT-26), Selflessness Scale (SS) and Multidimensional Perfectionism Scale (MPS). Based on their EAT-26 scores, 150 girls were invited to a clinical interview 2 years later (second phase). In the third phase 4 years later, 243 girls who completed the questionnaires in the seventh grade were the target of re-administration of these scales. Seventh-grade selflessness scores at initial screening phase predicted ED status determined in clinical interview at the 2-year interval and abnormal eating attitudes at the 4-year interval, above and beyond baseline seventh-grade eating-attitude scores. Perfectionism was not found to predict the development of neither ED nor abnormal eating attitudes. Preventional and therapeutic implications of the role of selflessness as a predisposing factor for ED are discussed.

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Eytan Bachar

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Omer Bonne

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Arieh Y. Shalev

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Atara Kaplan De-Nour

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Elliot M. Berry

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Inbal Reuveni

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Ronen Segman

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Bernard Lerer

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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