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Affective regulation in trichotillomania: Evidence from a large-scale internet survey
Authors:Anna Shusterman  Lauren Feld
Affiliation:a Wesleyan University, Department of Psychology, 207 High St., Middletown, CT 05459, USA
b Massachusetts General Hospital, Psychiatry Department, 55 Fruit Street, Boston, MA 02114, USA
Abstract:Trichotillomania (TTM), a repetitive hair-pulling disorder, is underrepresented in the clinical literature. The current project explores the relationship between affective regulation and disordered hair-pulling. Previous research suggests that cycles of emotional states are correlated with the disorder and may induce, reinforce, or otherwise contribute to hair-pulling behavior. We use anonymous internet survey responses from 1162 self-identified hair-pullers to address four questions about affective regulation in people with TTM: (1) Do hair-pullers experience greater difficulty “snapping out” of affective states than non-pullers? (2) Does difficulty with emotional control correlate with TTM severity? (3) Are subtypes identifiable based on the emotions that trigger hair-pulling behavior? (4) Does difficulty “snapping out” of an emotion predict whether that emotion triggers pulling behavior? The results showed a small-to-moderate relationship between affective regulation and problematic hair-pulling. In addition, individual patterns of emotion regulation were systematically related to emotional cues for hair-pulling as well as overall hair-pulling severity. These findings contribute to an understanding of the phenomenology of TTM and provide empirical support for treatments focused on affect regulation.
Keywords:Trichotillomania   Hair-pulling   Affective regulation   Emotion   Internet survey   Anxiety
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