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Dive into the research topics where Melissa J. Zielinski is active.

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Featured researches published by Melissa J. Zielinski.


Assessment | 2015

Multidimensional assessment of beliefs about emotion: development and validation of the emotion and regulation beliefs scale.

Jennifer C. Veilleux; Anna C. Salomaa; Jennifer A. Shaver; Melissa J. Zielinski; Garrett A. Pollert

Recent work has extended the idea of implicit self-theories to the realm of emotion to assess beliefs in the malleability of emotions. The current article expanded on prior measurement of emotion beliefs in a scale development project. Items were tested and revised over rounds of data collection with both students and nonstudent adult online participants. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses revealed a three-factor structure. The resulting scale, the Emotion and Regulation Beliefs Scale, assesses beliefs that emotions can hijack self-control, beliefs that emotion regulation is a worthwhile pursuit, and beliefs that emotions can constrain behavior. Preliminary findings suggest that the Emotion and Regulation Beliefs Scale has good internal consistency, is conceptually distinct from measures assessing individuals’ beliefs in their management of emotions and facets of emotional intelligence, and predicts clinically relevant outcomes even after controlling for an existing short measure of beliefs in emotion controllability.


Perception | 2012

Dividing a Fixed Portion into More Pieces Leads to Larger Portion Size Estimates of JELL-O® Squares

Jenna L. Scisco; Charlene Blades; Melissa J. Zielinski; Eric R. Muth

How visual qualities of a food impact perceptions of the amount of food present and consumed have been studied. Previous research has investigated many factors affecting these perceptions, including the height of a glass, the size of a serving bowl, and other food intake cues. We investigated how the number of pieces a serving is divided into impacts perceptions of the amount of food present and consumed. Results indicate that dividing a fixed portion into a greater number of pieces leads people to perceive a greater amount of food in the serving.


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2017

A short-term longitudinal examination of the relations between depression, anhedonia, and self-injurious thoughts and behaviors in adults with a history of self-injury

Melissa J. Zielinski; Jennifer C. Veilleux; E. Samuel Winer; Michael R. Nadorff

BACKGROUND Limited research has addressed the role of anhedonia in predicting suicidality and/or nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) in adults, despite evidence suggesting that loss of interest or pleasure may increase vulnerability for self-inflicted harm, even beyond other depressive symptoms. METHODS In the current study, we explored the role of symptoms of depression and recent changes in anhedonia in predicting suicidality, NSSI ideation, and perceptions of NSSI helpfulness among individuals with a history of NSSI or suicide attempts (N=187). RESULTS We found that changes in anhedonia partially mediated the effect of depression on suicidality, and fully mediated the effect of depression on perceptions of NSSI helpfulness. Anhedonia did not predict NSSI ideation above and beyond depression symptoms, and did not significantly predict NSSI frequency when accounting for suicidality. Compared to individuals with a history of NSSI only or suicide attempt only, people with a history of both NSSI and suicide attempt evidenced greater risk and symptomatology. CONCLUSIONS Results confirm the relation between anhedonia and suicidality evidenced in past research, but suggest a complex relationship between anhedonia, depression, and facets of non-suicidal self-injury.


Assessment | 2017

Behavioral Assessment of the Negative Emotion Aspect of Distress Tolerance

Jennifer C. Veilleux; Garrett A. Pollert; Melissa J. Zielinski; Jennifer A. Shaver; Morgan A. Hill

The current behavioral tasks assessing distress tolerance measure tolerance to frustration and tolerance to physical discomfort, but do not explicitly assess tolerance to negative emotion. We closely evaluated the conceptual distinctions between current behavioral tasks and self-report tasks assessing distress tolerance, and then developed a new behavioral distress tolerance task called the Emotional Image Tolerance (EIT) task. The EIT task retains elements of existing behavioral tasks (e.g., indices of persistence) while augmenting the reliability and content sufficiency of existing measures by including multiple trials, including a variety of negative affect stimuli, and separating overall task persistence from task persistence after onset of distress. In a series of three studies, we found that the EIT correlated with extant behavioral measures of distress tolerance, the computerized mirror-tracing task and a physical cold pressor task. Across all of the studies, we also evaluated whether the EIT correlated with self-report measures of distress tolerance and measures of psychopathology (e.g., depression, anxiety, and binge eating). Implications for the refinement of the distress tolerance construct are discussed.


Journal of Offender Rehabilitation | 2015

Expanding Research on a Brief Exposure-Based Group Treatment with Incarcerated Women

Marie E. Karlsson; Melissa J. Zielinski; Ana J. Bridges

Incarcerated women experience high rates of sexual victimization and mental illness. The current study evaluated outcomes from an eight-session exposure-based group treatment with incarcerated women who had experienced sexual victimization. A total of 52 women participated in nine separate groups over a 2-year period. Participants reported statistically significant reductions in posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, and generalized anxiety disorder symptoms from pretreatment to posttreatment (large effect sizes; all η2 > .20). Among participants with pretreatment and posttreatment data (n = 36), approximately 70% showed clinical significant reductions and/or were considered recovered (e.g., no longer above the clinical cutoff) on at least one of the three diagnostic measures.


Assessment | 2015

A multimodal examination of emotional responding to a trauma-relevant film among traumatic motor vehicle accident survivors

Sarah J. Bujarski; James T. Craig; Melissa J. Zielinski; Christal L. Badour; Matthew T. Feldner

The Facial Action Coding System (Ekman & Friesen) has shown promise as a behavioral measure of emotional experience. The current study examined the degree of (de)synchrony between self-reported and facial expressions of fear, disgust, and sadness in response to a traumatic event–relevant film among individuals who had experienced a traumatic motor vehicle accident. Given high rates of comorbidity between posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) and depressive symptoms, the potential impacts of both PTSS and depressive symptoms on emotional responding were examined. Results demonstrated synchrony between self-reported and facial expressions of disgust and sadness; however, no association between measures of fear was observed. Furthermore, depressive symptoms were associated with greater fear responding and PTSS were associated only with self-reported fear. Together, results support the importance of examining discrete negative emotions, rather than broad valence categories, when examining fear-based responding in traumatic event–exposed populations. Additional research examining the psychometric properties of the Facial Action Coding System as a measure of discrete emotional experiences among traumatic event–exposed individuals is needed to advance multimodal assessment approaches that yield incremental information for understanding emotional responding in this population.


Psychological Assessment | 2018

The Perceived Invalidation of Emotion Scale (PIES): Development and psychometric properties of a novel measure of current emotion invalidation.

Melissa J. Zielinski; Jennifer C. Veilleux

Emotion invalidation is theoretically and empirically associated with mental and physical health problems. However, existing measures of invalidation focus on past (e.g., childhood) invalidation and/or do not specifically emphasize invalidation of emotion. In this article, the authors articulate a clarified operational definition of emotion invalidation and use that definition as the foundation for development of a new measure of current perceived emotion invalidation across a series of five studies. Study 1 was a qualitative investigation of people’s experiences with emotional invalidation from which we generated items. An initial item pool was vetted by expert reviewers in Study 2 and examined via exploratory factor analysis in Study 3 within both college student and online samples. The scale was reduced to 10 items via confirmatory factor analysis in Study 4, resulting in a brief but psychometrically promising measure, the Perceived Invalidation of Emotion Scale (PIES). A short-term longitudinal investigation (Study 5) revealed that PIES scores had strong test–retest reliability, and that greater perceived emotion invalidation was associated with greater emotion dysregulation, borderline features and symptoms of emotional distress. In addition, the PIES predicted changes in relational health and psychological health over a 1-month period. The current set of studies thus presents a psychometrically promising and practical measure of perceived emotion invalidation that can provide a foundation for future research in this burgeoning area.


Personality and Mental Health | 2015

Does hostile rumination mediate the associations between reported child abuse, parenting characteristics and borderline features in adulthood?

Melissa J. Zielinski; Ashley Borders; Peter R. Giancola

This cross-sectional study investigated whether hostile rumination mediated the association between several indicators of a negative childhood environment (retrospectively reported child abuse and perceived parental care and overprotection) and borderline features. Community participants (N = 524) completed self-report measures in the laboratory. Results showed that adults exhibiting borderline features reported less parental care and more parental overprotection, as well as greater abuse. Additionally, hostile rumination statistically mediated the associations between all childhood environmental variables and borderline features, even controlling for depressive symptoms, alcohol use and impulsivity. Although cross-sectional data cannot test causal mediation, this pattern of results provides preliminary evidence that hostile rumination may partially account for the well-established connection between negative environments and borderline features. Future directions, including a discussion of longitudinal and experimental work that might help build on and strengthen the current findings, are explored.


Personality and Individual Differences | 2015

Facets of mindfulness mediate behavioral inhibition systems and emotion dysregulation

Elizabeth D. Reese; Melissa J. Zielinski; Jennifer C. Veilleux


Personality and Individual Differences | 2014

Examining the relation between borderline personality features and social support: The mediating role of rejection sensitivity

Melissa J. Zielinski; Jennifer C. Veilleux

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Ashley Borders

The College of New Jersey

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E. Samuel Winer

Mississippi State University

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