Daniel Talbot
University of Sydney
13 Papers
3 Citations
Daniel Talbot is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Eating disorders & Extraversion and introversion. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 13 publications. Previous affiliations of Daniel Talbot include University of Notre Dame.
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Papers
Development and validation of the New Somatomorphic Matrix–Male: A figural rating scale for measuring male actual–ideal body discrepancy.
TL;DR: The New Somatomorphic Matrix-Male (NSM-M) as discussed by the authors is a measure of actual-ideal body discrepancy, which is a visual matrix of 34 male bodies that vary along two dimensions: body fat percentage (range = 4-40%) and muscularity (fat-free mass index).
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Schema modes in eating disorders compared to a community sample.
TL;DR: Initial empirical support for a schema mode model of eating disorders is provided, with a tendency for females with eating disorders to rely on maladaptive schema modes more frequently, and more adaptive schema modes less frequently compared to a community sample.
Visual Body Scale for Men (VBSM): Validation of a new figural rating scale to measure perceived‐desired body discrepancy in men
TL;DR: The VBSM improves upon existing male figural rating scales in terms of image quality, includes both dimensions of a male body image, and demonstrates good psychometric properties.
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Male body dissatisfaction, eating disorder symptoms, body composition, and attentional bias to body stimuli evaluated using visual search:
TL;DR: This paper investigated the relationship between body dissatisfaction, eating disorder symptoms, and attentional bias to images of male bodies using a compound visual search task and found that sixty-three male subjects were surveyed.
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Exploration of height dissatisfaction, muscle dissatisfaction, body ideals, and eating disorder symptoms in men.
TL;DR: In this article, the relationship between height dissatisfaction, height, muscle and fat was examined, and the relationship was found to be a significant dimension of body dissatisfaction in men, and a significant predictor of body satisfaction.
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