| Keyword search (4,163 papers available) | ![]() |
"Côté SM" Authored Publications:
| Title | Authors | PubMed ID | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Trajectories of childhood eating behaviors and their association with internalizing and externalizing symptoms in adolescence | Dufour R; Breton É; Côté SM; Dubois L; Vitaro F; Boivin M; Tremblay RE; Booij L; | 40883733 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 2 | Mental health of Canadian youth: A systematic review and meta-analysis of studies examining changes in depression, anxiety, and suicide-related outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic | Geoffroy MC; Chadi N; Bouchard S; Fuoco J; Chartrand E; Loose T; Sciola A; Boruff JT; Iyer SN; Sun Y; Gouin JP; Côté SM; Thombs BD; | 38478216 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 3 | Childhood hyperactivity, eating behaviours, and executive functions: Their association with the development of eating-disorder symptoms in adolescence | Dufour R; Breton É; Morin AJS; Côté SM; Dubois L; Vitaro F; Boivin M; Tremblay RE; Booij L; | 37833803 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 4 | Childhood Overeating and Disordered Eating From Early Adolescence to Young Adulthood: A Longitudinal Study on the Mediating Role of BMI, Victimization and Desire for Thinness | Breton É; Côté SM; Dubois L; Vitaro F; Boivin M; Tremblay RE; Booij L; | 37270466 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 5 | Developmental trajectories of eating disorder symptoms: A longitudinal study from early adolescence to young adulthood | Breton É; Dufour R; Côté SM; Dubois L; Vitaro F; Boivin M; Tremblay RE; Booij L; | 35725645 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 6 | Polygenic scores differentially predict developmental trajectories of subtypes of social withdrawal in childhood | Morneau-Vaillancourt G; Andlauer TFM; Ouellet-Morin I; Paquin S; Brendgen MR; Vitaro F; Gouin JP; Séguin JR; Gagnon É; Cheesman R; Forget-Dubois N; Rouleau GA; Turecki G; Tremblay RE; Côté SM; Dionne G; Boivin M; | 34085288 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 7 | Extra-striatal D2/3 receptor availability in youth at risk for addiction. | Jaworska N, Cox SML, Tippler M, Castellanos-Ryan N, Benkelfat C, Parent S, Dagher A, Vitaro F, Boivin M, Pihl RO, Côté SM, Tremblay RE, Séguin JR, Leyton M | 32259831 CSBN |
| Title: | Childhood hyperactivity, eating behaviours, and executive functions: Their association with the development of eating-disorder symptoms in adolescence | ||||
| Authors: | Dufour R, Breton É, Morin AJS, Côté SM, Dubois L, Vitaro F, Boivin M, Tremblay RE, Booij L | ||||
| Link: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37833803/ | ||||
| DOI: | 10.1186/s40337-023-00902-z | ||||
| Publication: | Journal of eating disorders | ||||
| Keywords: | Adolescence; Childhood eating; Eating disorders; Executive functions; Hyperactivity; | ||||
| PMID: | 37833803 | Category: | Date Added: | 2023-10-14 | |
| Dept Affiliation: | PSYCHOLOGY | ||||
Description: |
Background: Cross-sectional studies have shown that hyperactivity and impaired executive functioning are associated with symptoms of eating disorders in adolescence and adulthood. Whether hyperactivity and executive functions in early life can prospectively predict the emergence of eating disorder symptoms in adolescence remains unknown. The present study relies on a longitudinal design to investigate how hyperactivity at age 3, eating behaviours at age 3.5 and cognition at ages 3-6 were associated with the development of eating-disorder symptoms from 12 to 20 years old. Methods: Using archival data collected since 1997 from the Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development cohort (N = 2, 223), we used Latent Curve Models to analyse predictors of youth's trajectories of eating-disorder symptoms at four timepoints. Results: A quadratic (curvilinear) trajectory of eating-disorder symptoms was found to be most representative of the data. Higher hyperactivity at age 3 was associated with higher levels of eating-disorder symptoms at age 12, and this association was partially mediated by higher levels of overeating and cognitive inflexibility in childhood. Cognitive inflexibility in childhood also mediated the association between hyperactivity at age 3 and increases in eating-disorder symptoms during adolescence. Furthermore, working memory was indirectly related to eating-disorder symptoms via the mediational role of cognitive flexibility. Conclusions: Hyperactivity, overeating, cognitive inflexibility, and working memory early in life might precede the onset of eating-disorder symptoms in adolescence. Early behavioural and cognitive screening may help to identify children who are most at risk for eating disorders. This, in turn, could guide preventive interventions. |



