Czeglédi Edit - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Papers by Czeglédi Edit
Magyar Pszichológiai Szemle, 2010
A vizsgálat során magyar nyelvre adaptáltuk a 21 tételes Háromfaktoros Evési Kérdőívet (Three-Fac... more A vizsgálat során magyar nyelvre adaptáltuk a 21 tételes Háromfaktoros Evési Kérdőívet (Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire Revised 21-item; TFEQ-R21). Fő célkitűzésünk a kérdőív eredeti faktorstruktúrájának alátámasztása és pszichometriai elemzése volt. Célul tűztük ki továbbá az evési magatartás egyes determinánsainak vizsgálatát. Keresztmetszeti, kérdőíves kutatásunkban az ELTE PPK hallgatónői (n=262; átlagéletkor 21,7 év, szórás: 2,78; testtömeg-index (BMI) átlaga 20,8 kg/m 2 , szórás: 2,93) vettek részt. Az alábbi mérőeszközöket alkalmaztuk: a TFEQ-R21 magyar nyelvű változata, Vonásszorongás skála, Testi Attitűdök Tesztje. Az elemzés konfirmatív faktoranalízissel (CFA; MIMIC) és többjellemzős-többtételes elemzéssel történt. A CFA alátámasztotta a TFEQ-R21 eredeti faktoriális struktúráját. Skálák: kontrollálatlan evés, kognitív korlátozás, érzelmi evés. A skálák belső konzisztenciája (Cronbach α: 0,82–0,93) és kéthetes intervallumban vizsgált teszt-reteszt reliabilitása (r s : 0,7...
Magyar Pszichológiai Szemle, 2013
ABSTRACT Background. Cognitive approaches to obesity treatment assume that weight loss is more li... more ABSTRACT Background. Cognitive approaches to obesity treatment assume that weight loss is more likely to occur if individuals perceive many benefits and few costs. Obesity Beliefs Scale (OBS; SWIFT, GLAZEBROOK, NOVAK, & ANNESS, 2007) assesses beliefs about the health and non-health costs and benefits associated with obesity and the costs associated with weight control. Objectives. The main goals of the study were to adapt the OBS into Hungarian, to conduct the psychometric analysis of the instrument, to examine the potential determinants of obesity related beliefs, and to explore the potential role of these beliefs regarding intentional weight loss. Methods. Study design was a prospective, questionnaire-based research. The time interval was six months that contained two data administration. Study sample consisted of the participants of the III. "Together-Easier" workplace lifestyle-changing team competition (N=377; 231 women and 146 men). The mean age was 38.8 years (SD=9.58 years, range 22-60 years). The mean BMI at the beginning was 27.0 kg/m2 (SD=5.52 kg/m2, range 18.1-60.6 kg/m2). Sixty-one percent of the participants were overweight or obese (BMI?25.0 kg/m2). Measures were objective measures of anthropometric data (body weight, body height, body fat percentage), and the Hungarian version of OBS. Results. The confirmatory factor analysis supported the factorial structure of OBS with slight changes (?2 (84)=173.6, p<.0001, CFI=.927, TLI=.908, RMSEA=.053, RMSEA CI90=.042-.064). The internal consistencies of the scales were acceptable (Cronbach's alphas ranged from .66 to .75). According to the results of the MIMIC analysis, overweight/obese participants and women endorse costs of ideal weight more than participants with normal weight and men. The higher educated participants shared the beliefs of social and aesthetical consequences of obesity more than less educated people (those who finished elementary or high school). Obesity related beliefs did not predict successful weight loss. Conclusions. Hungarian version of the Obesity Beliefs Scale is a psychometrically promising measure, and is suitable for widespread distribution in Hungary. The role of the obesity related beliefs regarding intentional weight loss requires further examination.
Psihijatrija danas, 2015
Background and purpose: Body image dissatisfaction has recently been described as ‘normative’ for... more Background and purpose: Body image dissatisfaction has recently been described as ‘normative’ for both men and women. Despite intense theoretical interest in a multidimensional concept of male body image, comprehensive models have rarely been assessed empirically. The aim of this study was therefore to examine the relationship between body image and self-esteem among men in a multivariate model. Methods: Participants of this cross-sectional questionnaire study were 239 male university students (mean age: 20.3 years, SD=2.78 years, range: 18–39 years). Measures: self-reported anthropometric data, weightlifting activity, importance of appearance, perceived weight status, satisfaction with body height, Body Shape Questionnaire – Short form, Muscle Appearance Satisfaction Scale, Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale. Results: Structural equation modeling showed that after controlling for age, BMI, weightlifting activity, the importance of appearance, and trait anxiety, only muscle dissatisfaction...
Magyar Pszichológiai Szemle, 2010
A vizsgálat során magyar nyelvre adaptáltuk a 21 tételes Háromfaktoros Evési Kérdőívet (Three-Fac... more A vizsgálat során magyar nyelvre adaptáltuk a 21 tételes Háromfaktoros Evési Kérdőívet (Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire Revised 21-item; TFEQ-R21). Fő célkitűzésünk a kérdőív eredeti faktorstruktúrájának alátámasztása és pszichometriai elemzése volt. Célul tűztük ki továbbá az evési magatartás egyes determinánsainak vizsgálatát. Keresztmetszeti, kérdőíves kutatásunkban az ELTE PPK hallgatónői (n=262; átlagéletkor 21,7 év, szórás: 2,78; testtömeg-index (BMI) átlaga 20,8 kg/m 2 , szórás: 2,93) vettek részt. Az alábbi mérőeszközöket alkalmaztuk: a TFEQ-R21 magyar nyelvű változata, Vonásszorongás skála, Testi Attitűdök Tesztje. Az elemzés konfirmatív faktoranalízissel (CFA; MIMIC) és többjellemzős-többtételes elemzéssel történt. A CFA alátámasztotta a TFEQ-R21 eredeti faktoriális struktúráját. Skálák: kontrollálatlan evés, kognitív korlátozás, érzelmi evés. A skálák belső konzisztenciája (Cronbach α: 0,82–0,93) és kéthetes intervallumban vizsgált teszt-reteszt reliabilitása (r s : 0,7...
Magyar Pszichológiai Szemle, 2013
ABSTRACT Background. Cognitive approaches to obesity treatment assume that weight loss is more li... more ABSTRACT Background. Cognitive approaches to obesity treatment assume that weight loss is more likely to occur if individuals perceive many benefits and few costs. Obesity Beliefs Scale (OBS; SWIFT, GLAZEBROOK, NOVAK, & ANNESS, 2007) assesses beliefs about the health and non-health costs and benefits associated with obesity and the costs associated with weight control. Objectives. The main goals of the study were to adapt the OBS into Hungarian, to conduct the psychometric analysis of the instrument, to examine the potential determinants of obesity related beliefs, and to explore the potential role of these beliefs regarding intentional weight loss. Methods. Study design was a prospective, questionnaire-based research. The time interval was six months that contained two data administration. Study sample consisted of the participants of the III. "Together-Easier" workplace lifestyle-changing team competition (N=377; 231 women and 146 men). The mean age was 38.8 years (SD=9.58 years, range 22-60 years). The mean BMI at the beginning was 27.0 kg/m2 (SD=5.52 kg/m2, range 18.1-60.6 kg/m2). Sixty-one percent of the participants were overweight or obese (BMI?25.0 kg/m2). Measures were objective measures of anthropometric data (body weight, body height, body fat percentage), and the Hungarian version of OBS. Results. The confirmatory factor analysis supported the factorial structure of OBS with slight changes (?2 (84)=173.6, p<.0001, CFI=.927, TLI=.908, RMSEA=.053, RMSEA CI90=.042-.064). The internal consistencies of the scales were acceptable (Cronbach's alphas ranged from .66 to .75). According to the results of the MIMIC analysis, overweight/obese participants and women endorse costs of ideal weight more than participants with normal weight and men. The higher educated participants shared the beliefs of social and aesthetical consequences of obesity more than less educated people (those who finished elementary or high school). Obesity related beliefs did not predict successful weight loss. Conclusions. Hungarian version of the Obesity Beliefs Scale is a psychometrically promising measure, and is suitable for widespread distribution in Hungary. The role of the obesity related beliefs regarding intentional weight loss requires further examination.
Psihijatrija danas, 2015
Background and purpose: Body image dissatisfaction has recently been described as ‘normative’ for... more Background and purpose: Body image dissatisfaction has recently been described as ‘normative’ for both men and women. Despite intense theoretical interest in a multidimensional concept of male body image, comprehensive models have rarely been assessed empirically. The aim of this study was therefore to examine the relationship between body image and self-esteem among men in a multivariate model. Methods: Participants of this cross-sectional questionnaire study were 239 male university students (mean age: 20.3 years, SD=2.78 years, range: 18–39 years). Measures: self-reported anthropometric data, weightlifting activity, importance of appearance, perceived weight status, satisfaction with body height, Body Shape Questionnaire – Short form, Muscle Appearance Satisfaction Scale, Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale. Results: Structural equation modeling showed that after controlling for age, BMI, weightlifting activity, the importance of appearance, and trait anxiety, only muscle dissatisfaction...