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Kristin E. Heron

Researcher at Old Dominion University

Publications -  75
Citations -  2973

Kristin E. Heron is an academic researcher from Old Dominion University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Disordered eating & Binge eating. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 65 publications receiving 2382 citations. Previous affiliations of Kristin E. Heron include Pennsylvania State University & Syracuse University.

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Ecological momentary interventions: incorporating mobile technology into psychosocial and health behaviour treatments.

TL;DR: Mobile technology-based EMI can be effectively implemented as interventions for a variety of health behaviours and psychological and physical symptoms and future research should integrate the assessment and intervention capabilities of mobile technology to create dynamically and individually tailored EMI that are ecologically sensitive.
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Daily and momentary mood and stress are associated with binge eating and vomiting in bulimia nervosa patients in the natural environment.

TL;DR: Demonstration of the temporal sequencing of affect, STRS, and BN-events with a large BN sample may help advance theory and clinical practice, and supports the view that binge and purge events hold negatively reinforcing properties for women with BN.
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Prevalence, Type, Disclosure, and Severity of Adverse Life Events in College Students.

TL;DR: Research using college samples for the study of stressful life events is a useful and reasonable strategy and implications for research, as well as screening and referral services at universities.
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Using Mobile-Technology-Based Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) Methods With Youth: A Systematic Review and Recommendations.

TL;DR: Overall, the research suggests EMA can be successfully implemented with youth from diverse backgrounds, but protocol adaptations may be necessary for younger children.
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The influence of reported trauma and adverse events on eating disturbance in young adults.

TL;DR: It is suggested that reports of past trauma and adverse events cross-sectionally predict reported disordered eating at college entry as well as prospective increases in disordered Eating over the first semester of college.