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Tatjana van Strien

Tatjana van Strien

D-Index & Metrics

Psychology

D-Index
61
Citations
16528
World Ranking
3351
National Ranking
171

Overview

Tatjana van Strien is affiliated with Radboud University in the Netherlands. Their research primarily focuses on the fields of psychology, with specific attention to clinical psychology, social psychology, and applied psychology. Their work also spans experimental and cognitive psychology as well as public health, environmental, and occupational health.

The central themes of Tatjana van Strien's research include eating disorders and behaviors, obsessive-compulsive spectrum disorders, anxiety and depression, psychometrics, treatment, cognitive processes, body image and dysmorphia studies, psychological well-being and life satisfaction, nutritional studies and diet, and child therapy and development.

Recent publications by Tatjana van Strien include:

  • Dialectical behavior therapy adapted for binge eating compared to cognitive behavior therapy in obese adults with binge eating disorder: a controlled study (2020, Journal of Eating Disorders)
  • Dialectical behavior therapy compared to cognitive behavior therapy in binge-eating disorder: An effectiveness study with 6-month follow-up (2022, International Journal of Eating Disorders)
  • Does food intake mediate the association between mindful eating and change in depressive symptoms? (2020, Public Health Nutrition)
  • Application of three different coaching strategies through a virtual coach for people with emotional eating: a vignette study (2021, Journal of Eating Disorders)
  • Parent-Infant Attachment Insecurity and Emotional Eating in Adolescence: Mediation through Emotion Suppression and Alexithymia (2021, Nutrients)

Frequent co-authors with whom Tatjana van Strien has collaborated include:

  • M. W. Lammers
  • Maartje S. Vroling
  • Ross D. Crosby
  • Aranka Dol
  • Christina Bode

They have published frequently in journals such as:

  • Journal of Eating Disorders
  • International Journal of Eating Disorders
  • Public Health Nutrition
  • Nutrients
  • Frontiers in Psychology

Best Publications

  • The Dutch Eating Behavior Questionnaire (DEBQ) for assessment of restrained, emotional, and external eating behavior.

    Tatjana van Strien;Jan E. R. Frijters;Gerard P. A. Bergers;Peter B. Defares

  • Relations between negative affect, coping, and emotional eating

    Sonja T.P. Spoor;Marrie H.J. Bekker;Tatjana Van Strien;Guus L. van Heck

  • Assessment of emotional, externally induced and restrained eating behaviour in nine to twelve-year-old obese and non-obese children.

    C. Braet;T. van Strien

  • Causes of Emotional Eating and Matched Treatment of Obesity.

    Tatjana van Strien;Tatjana van Strien

  • The children's DEBQ for assessment of restrained, emotional, and external eating in 7- to 12-year-old children.

    Tatjana van Strien;Paul Oosterveld

  • The predictive validity of the Dutch Restrained Eating Scale

    Tatjana van Strien;Jan E. R. Frijters;Wija A. van Staveren;Peter B. Defares

  • Eating style, overeating, and overweight in a representative Dutch sample. Does external eating play a role?

    Tatjana van Strien;C. Peter Herman;Marieke W. Verheijden

  • Emotional eating, rather than lifestyle behavior, drives weight gain in a prospective study in 1562 employees.

    Paul G. Koenders;Tatjana van Strien

  • Depression, emotional eating and long-term weight changes: a population-based prospective study

    Hanna Konttinen;Tatjana van Strien;Tatjana van Strien;Satu Männistö;Pekka Jousilahti

  • Emotional eating as a mediator between depression and weight gain.

    Tatjana van Strien;Tatjana van Strien;Hanna Konttinen;Judith R. Homberg;Rutger C.M.E. Engels

  • Possible pathways between depression, emotional and external eating. A structural equation model

    Machteld A. Ouwens;Tatjana van Strien;Jan F.J. van Leeuwe

  • The Stice model of overeating: Tests in clinical and non-clinical samples

    Tatjana Van Strien;Rutger C.M.E. Engels;Jan Van Leeuwe;Harriëtte M. Snoek

  • Validation of the eating disorders inventory in a nonclinical population using transformed and untransformed responses

    Casper Schoemaker;Tatjana van Strien;Cees van der Staak

  • Gender differences in the association between alexithymia and emotional eating in obese individuals

    Junilla K. Larsen;Tatjana van Strien;Rob Eisinga;Rutger C.M.E. Engels

  • Emotional, external, restrained eating and overweight in Dutch adolescents.

    Harriëtte M. Snoek;Tatjana Van Strien;Jan M. A. M. Janssens;Rutger C. M. E. Engels

  • Effects of distress, alexithymia and impulsivity on eating

    Tatjana van Strien;Machteld A. Ouwens

  • Tendency toward overeating and restraint as predictors of food consumption

    Machteld A Ouwens;Tatjana van Strien;Cees P.F van der Staak

  • Eating style, overeating and weight gain. A prospective 2-year follow-up study in a representative Dutch sample

    Tatjana van Strien;C. Peter Herman;Marieke W. Verheijden

  • Exposure to slim images in mass media: Television commercials as reminders of restriction in restrained eaters

    Doeschka J. Anschutz;Tatjana van Strien;Rutger C. M. E. Engels

  • Parental behaviour and adolescents’ emotional eating

    Harriëtte M. Snoek;Rutger C.M.E. Engels;Jan M.A.M. Janssens;Tatjana van Strien

Frequent Co-Authors

Rutger C. M. E. Engels
Rutger C. M. E. Engels Erasmus University Rotterdam
Doeschka J. Anschutz
Doeschka J. Anschutz Radboud University
C. Peter Herman
C. Peter Herman University of Toronto
Junilla K. Larsen
Junilla K. Larsen Radboud University
Ausiàs Cebolla
Ausiàs Cebolla University of Valencia
Marjolein Visser
Marjolein Visser Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Eni S. Becker
Eni S. Becker Radboud University
Guus L. Van Heck
Guus L. Van Heck Tilburg University
Carolina de Weerth
Carolina de Weerth Radboud University

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