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Dive into the research topics where Rose Mary Webb is active.

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Featured researches published by Rose Mary Webb.


Evolutionary Psychology | 2011

Physical Cues of Ovulatory Status: A Failure to Replicate Enhanced Facial Attractiveness and Reduced Waist-to-Hip Ratio at High Fertility:

April Bleske-Rechek; Heather D. Harris; Kelly Denkinger; Rose Mary Webb; Leah Erickson; Lyndsay A. Nelson

We investigated womens facial attractiveness and body shape as a function of menstrual cycle phase, with the expectation from previous research that both would be enhanced during the high fertile phase. To control for the effects of womens daily behaviors on their appearance and waistline, we visited 37 normally cycling women twice in their dorm, where we photographed and measured them at low and high fertile days of their cycle immediately upon their waking. Seventy-four judges from a separate institution chose, for each woman, the picture they thought was more attractive. We analyzed a subset of 20 women who, by forward counting, had a High Fertility visit between Days 10–13 and a Low Fertility visit between Days 20–23; and we also analyzed a subsample of 17 women who, by reverse counting, had a High Fertility visit on the days leading to ovulation and a Low Fertility visit one week after ovulation. In neither set of analyses were womens waist-to-hip ratios lower nearer ovulation, and in neither set were womens high fertile pictures chosen at an above-chance rate by either male or female judges. We did not find evidence that facial attractiveness and waist-to-hip ratio are reliable physical cues of ovulatory status.


Psychological Assessment | 2017

Measuring Adult Picky Eating: The Development of a Multidimensional Self-Report Instrument.

Jordan M. Ellis; Amy T. Galloway; Rose Mary Webb; Denise M. Martz

A brief multidimensional measure of adult picky eating (PE) behavior was developed using a large U.S. adult sample. In addition, the study explored associations between specific aspects of adult PE behavior and psychosocial impairment in effort to support the inclusion of adults in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders-Fifth Edition (DSM–5) avoidant-restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID). The study included 3 phases of qualitative and quantitative data collection. Participants were 1,663 U.S. adults who completed online surveys. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses were used to develop PE subscales. Associations among the PE subscales and measures of psychosocial impairment were examined. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis supported a 16-item 4-factor model of adult PE that included subscales of meal presentation, food variety, meal disengagement, and taste aversion. The measure also demonstrated convergence with previous measures of PE. The meal disengagement and meal presentation subscales demonstrated significant associations with social eating anxiety, anxiety sensitivity, eating related quality of life (QOL), and psychological flexibility. Meal disengagement alone was significantly associated with depressive symptoms. The Adult Picky Eating Questionnaire (APEQ) demonstrated sound psychometric properties and may be used to further investigate adult PE behavior. The relationships between adult PE and psychological impairment, particularly social anxiety, support the inclusion of ARFID in the DSM–5.


Appetite | 2016

Recollections of pressure to eat during childhood, but not picky eating, predict young adult eating behavior

Jordan M. Ellis; Amy T. Galloway; Rose Mary Webb; Denise M. Martz; Claire V. Farrow

Picky eating is a childhood behavior that vexes many parents and is a symptom in the newer diagnosis of Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID) in adults. Pressure to eat, a parental controlling feeding practice aimed at encouraging a child to eat more, is associated with picky eating and a number of other childhood eating concerns. Low intuitive eating, an insensitivity to internal hunger and satiety cues, is also associated with a number of problem eating behaviors in adulthood. Whether picky eating and pressure to eat are predictive of young adult eating behavior is relatively unstudied. Current adult intuitive eating and disordered eating behaviors were self-reported by 170 college students, along with childhood picky eating and pressure through retrospective self- and parent reports. Hierarchical regression analyses revealed that childhood parental pressure to eat, but not picky eating, predicted intuitive eating and disordered eating symptoms in college students. These findings suggest that parental pressure in childhood is associated with problematic eating patterns in young adulthood. Additional research is needed to understand the extent to which parental pressure is a reaction to or perhaps compounds the development of problematic eating behavior.


Body Image | 2011

Predicting Ideal Body Mass Index: What Does Clothing Size Have To Do With It?

Anna B. Petroff; Denise M. Martz; Rose Mary Webb; Amy T. Galloway

This study examined demographic and anthropometric variables as predictors of ideal body mass index (BMI) from cross-sectional, archival, self-reported data from the Psychology of Size Survey of 4014 U.S. residents collected in 2007. As hypothesized, ideal BMI can be predicted by a within gender hierarchical multiple regression analysis with the predictor variables of age, number of clothing sizes from ideal size, and current BMI; these variables account for 54.1% of variance in womens ideal BMI and 65.5% of variance in mens ideal BMI. Findings also demonstrated a logarithmic relationship between current BMI and ideal BMI, with increasing variance in ideal BMI for individuals with high current BMIs. These findings evidence the strong role of current body characteristics in the formation of ideals. Understanding how individuals conceptualize body ideals can inform researchers and practitioners alike, as this evidence has important implications related to both medical and psychological health.


Body Image | 2013

Body size dissatisfaction and avoidance behavior: How gender, age, ethnicity, and relative clothing size predict what some won’t try

Laura E. Maphis; Denise M. Martz; Shawn S. Bergman; Lisa Curtin; Rose Mary Webb

Sixty-eight percent of U.S. adults are overweight/obese, and this epidemic has physical, psychosocial, and behavioral consequences. An internet sample of adults (N=2997) perceiving themselves as larger than ideal in clothing size reported their body mass index (BMI), relative clothing size (RS; discrepancy between current and ideal size), and avoidance behaviors. Exploratory factor analysis of 10 avoidance items produced social avoidance and body display avoidance factors. A relative importance analysis revealed RS as a better predictor than BMI for avoidance. A hierarchical multivariate analysis of covariance found RS to predict both avoidance constructs. The relationship between RS and both avoidance constructs was stronger for women than men, and for younger as compared to older participants. Caucasians reported more body display avoidance than African Americans. This suggests that personal dissatisfaction with body size may deter involvement in varied life events and that women are especially avoidant of activities that entail displaying their bodies.


Anxiety Stress and Coping | 2011

The effects of physiological arousal on cognitive and psychomotor performance among individuals with high and low anxiety sensitivity

Kirsten E. Barnard; Joshua J. Broman-Fulks; Kurt D. Michael; Rose Mary Webb; Laci L. Zawilinski

Abstract Information-processing models of anxiety posit that anxiety pathology is associated with processing biases that consume cognitive resources and may detract from ones ability to process environmental stimuli. Previous research has consistently indicated that high anxiety has a negative impact on cognitive and psychomotor performance. Anxiety sensitivity, or the fear of anxiety and anxiety-related arousal sensations, is an anxiety vulnerability factor that has been shown to play a role in the development and maintenance of panic attacks and panic disorder. However, relatively little is known regarding the potential impact of anxiety sensitivity on performance. In the present study, 105 college students who scored either high (≥24) or low (≤14) on the Anxiety Sensitivity Index were randomly assigned to complete a series of arousal-induction tasks or no activity, followed immediately by three cognitive and psychomotor performance tasks: digit span – backward, math fluency, and grooved pegboard. Results indicated that participants with high anxiety sensitivity performed comparably to individuals with low anxiety sensitivity on each task, regardless of arousal level.


Appetite | 2018

A multidimensional approach to understanding the potential risk factors and covariates of adult picky eating

Jordan M. Ellis; Rebecca R. Schenk; Amy T. Galloway; Hana F. Zickgraf; Rose Mary Webb; Denise M. Martz

OBJECTIVE Adult picky eating (PE) has received increased attention in the eating behavior literature due to its important association with adult avoidant-restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID). The current study tested a model of potential risk factors of adult PE behavior, including perceived early parental feeding practices. An exploratory model was also utilized to understand associations with different aspects of adult PE behaviors. METHODS A sample of 1339 US adults recruited through Amazons MTurk completed an online survey that included the recently developed Adult Picky Eating Questionnaire (APEQ), retrospective reports of parental feeding practices, and other measures of eating behavior and demographic variables. A structural equation modeling procedure tested a series of regression models that included BMI and disordered eating behaviors as covariates. RESULTS SEM modeling indicated that retrospective reports of greater parental pressure to eat, higher disgust sensitivity, lower PE age of onset, and experiencing an aversive food event were associated with general adult PE behavior. Results also indicated parental encouragement of healthy eating may be a protective factor, and that men endorsed higher levels of adult PE. Exploratory analyses indicated that cross-sectional predictors and covariates were differentially related to specific aspects of PE as measured by the APEQ subscales. CONCLUSIONS Early experiences, including parental approaches to feeding, appear to be potential risk factors of PE behavior in adults. A nuanced understanding of adult PE is important for the prevention and treatment of severe PE behaviors, related psychosocial impairment, and ARFID.


Pediatric Obesity | 2011

Parental use of differential restrictive feeding practices with siblings.

Lucinda O. Payne; Amy T. Galloway; Rose Mary Webb


Appetite | 2011

The role of child temperament in parental child feeding practices and attitudes using a sibling design.

M. Greg Horn; Amy T. Galloway; Rose Mary Webb; Sandra Glover Gagnon


Appetite | 2014

Parental child feeding practices: how do perceptions of mother, father, sibling, and self vary?

Carol Pulley; Amy T. Galloway; Rose Mary Webb; Lucinda O. Payne

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Amy T. Galloway

Appalachian State University

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Denise M. Martz

Appalachian State University

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Lisa Curtin

Appalachian State University

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Lucinda O. Payne

Appalachian State University

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Anna B. Petroff

Appalachian State University

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April Bleske-Rechek

University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire

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Carol Pulley

Appalachian State University

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Courtney B. Rogers

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

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Doris G. Bazzini

Appalachian State University

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