@article{MTMT:34816569, title = {The absorption-addiction model of celebrity worship: in search of a broader theoretical foundation}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34816569}, author = {Aruguete, Mara S. and Grieve, Frederick and Zsila, Ágnes and Horváth, Hilda Rita and Demetrovics, Zsolt and McCutcheon, Lynn E.}, doi = {10.1186/s40359-024-01733-6}, journal-iso = {BMC PSYCHOLOGY}, journal = {BMC PSYCHOLOGY}, volume = {12}, unique-id = {34816569}, issn = {2050-7283}, year = {2024}, eissn = {2050-7283}, orcid-numbers = {Zsila, Ágnes/0000-0002-8291-5997; Demetrovics, Zsolt/0000-0001-5604-7551} } @article{MTMT:34806278, title = {Downloading appetite? Investigating the role of parasocial relationship with favorite social media food influencer in followers’ disordered eating behaviors}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34806278}, author = {Shabahang, Reza and Kim, Sohee and Chen, Xiuhan and Aruguete, Mara S. and Zsila, Ágnes}, doi = {10.1007/s40519-024-01658-4}, journal-iso = {EAT WEIGHT DISORD-ST}, journal = {EATING AND WEIGHT DISORDERS - STUDIES ON ANOREXIA, BULIMIA AND OBESITY}, volume = {29}, unique-id = {34806278}, issn = {1124-4909}, year = {2024}, eissn = {1590-1262}, orcid-numbers = {Shabahang, Reza/0000-0002-8717-9378; Kim, Sohee/0000-0002-7460-9412; Aruguete, Mara S./0000-0003-0588-1516; Zsila, Ágnes/0000-0002-8291-5997} } @article{MTMT:34800559, title = {Prevalence of celebrity worship: Development and application of the short version of the Celebrity Attitude Scale (CAS-7) on a large-scale representative sample}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34800559}, author = {Zsila, Ágnes and McCutcheon, Lynn E. and Horváth, Rita and Urbán, Róbert and Paksi, Borbála and Darnai, Gergely and Janszky, József Vladimír and Demetrovics, Zsolt}, doi = {10.1556/2006.2024.00019}, journal-iso = {J BEHAV ADDICT}, journal = {JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL ADDICTIONS}, unique-id = {34800559}, issn = {2062-5871}, year = {2024}, eissn = {2063-5303}, orcid-numbers = {Zsila, Ágnes/0000-0002-8291-5997; Horváth, Rita/0009-0005-2662-2136; Urbán, Róbert/0000-0002-2058-5937; Paksi, Borbála/0000-0002-3616-2867; Darnai, Gergely/0000-0002-7042-8059; Janszky, József Vladimír/0000-0001-6100-832X; Demetrovics, Zsolt/0000-0001-5604-7551} } @article{MTMT:34779723, title = {Olfactory genes affect major depression in highly educated, emotionally stable, lean women: a bridge between animal models and precision medicine}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34779723}, author = {Eszlári, Nóra and Hullám, Gábor István and Gál, Zsófia and Török, Dóra and Nagy, Tamás and Millinghoffer, András Dániel and Baksa, Dániel and Gonda, Xénia and Antal, Péter and Bagdy, György and Juhász, Gabriella}, doi = {10.1038/s41398-024-02867-2}, journal-iso = {TRANSL PSYCHIAT}, journal = {TRANSLATIONAL PSYCHIATRY}, volume = {14}, unique-id = {34779723}, issn = {2158-3188}, abstract = {Most current approaches to establish subgroups of depressed patients for precision medicine aim to rely on biomarkers that require highly specialized assessment. Our present aim was to stratify participants of the UK Biobank cohort based on three readily measurable common independent risk factors, and to investigate depression genomics in each group to discover common and separate biological etiology. Two-step cluster analysis was run separately in males ( n = 149,879) and females ( n = 174,572), with neuroticism (a tendency to experience negative emotions), body fat percentage, and years spent in education as input variables. Genome-wide association analyses were implemented within each of the resulting clusters, for the lifetime occurrence of either a depressive episode or recurrent depressive disorder as the outcome. Variant-based, gene-based, gene set-based, and tissue-specific gene expression test were applied. Phenotypically distinct clusters with high genetic intercorrelations in depression genomics were found. A two-cluster solution was the best model in each sex with some differences including the less important role of neuroticism in males. In females, in case of a protective pattern of low neuroticism, low body fat percentage, and high level of education, depression was associated with pathways related to olfactory function. While also in females but in a risk pattern of high neuroticism, high body fat percentage, and less years spent in education, depression showed association with complement system genes. Our results, on one hand, indicate that alteration of olfactory pathways, that can be paralleled to the well-known rodent depression models of olfactory bulbectomy, might be a novel target towards precision psychiatry in females with less other risk factors for depression. On the other hand, our results in multi-risk females may provide a special case of immunometabolic depression.}, year = {2024}, eissn = {2158-3188}, orcid-numbers = {Eszlári, Nóra/0000-0003-4913-028X; Hullám, Gábor István/0000-0002-4765-2351; Gál, Zsófia/0000-0002-9441-1497; Török, Dóra/0000-0001-9213-4345; Nagy, Tamás/0000-0002-0137-4341; Baksa, Dániel/0000-0002-7826-9179; Gonda, Xénia/0000-0001-9015-4203; Bagdy, György/0000-0001-8141-3410; Juhász, Gabriella/0000-0002-5975-4267} } @article{MTMT:34735570, title = {Social media-related nightmare — a potential explanation for poor sleep quality and low affective well-being in the social media era?}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34735570}, author = {Shabahang, Reza and Kim, Sohee and Aruguete, Mara S. and Azadimanesh, Pegah and Ghaemi, Zahra and Khanzadeh, Abbas Ali Hossein and Kakabaraee, Keivan and Zsila, Ágnes}, doi = {10.1186/s40359-024-01605-z}, journal-iso = {BMC PSYCHOLOGY}, journal = {BMC PSYCHOLOGY}, volume = {12}, unique-id = {34735570}, issn = {2050-7283}, abstract = {Research has posited that social media use during the day may be reflected in nighttime dreams. Nevertheless, no prior studies have explored frightening, unpleasant dreams arising from social media use. This study introduces the construct of the social media-related nightmare by (a) developing and validating a scale capturing negative-valenced dreams with themes of helplessness, loss of control, inhibition, victimization, and making mistakes in social media, and (b) examining relationships between social media use, social media-related nightmares, sleep quality, and affective well-being. A convenience sample of 595 Iranian adult social media users ( M age = 27.45, SD age = 11.42) reported on social media-related nightmare, social media use integration, anxiety, peace of mind, sleep quality, and nightmare distress. The Social Media-Related Nightmare Scale ( SMNS ) demonstrated a unidimensional structure with sound psychometric properties. The most common nightmares involved the inability to log in to social media and the disruption of relationships with other users. Social media use intensity predicted frequency of social media-related nightmares. These nightmares were correlated with increased anxiety, lower peace of mind, poor sleep quality, and nightmare distress. Importantly, social media-related nightmares mediated the relationship between social media use intensity and low affective well-being (i.e., anxiety and peace of mind), poor sleeping, and nightmare distress. The findings suggest that social media-related nightmares could be a potential pathway through which social media engagement may lead to affective distress and sleep difficulties.}, year = {2024}, eissn = {2050-7283}, orcid-numbers = {Shabahang, Reza/0000-0002-8717-9378; Kim, Sohee/0000-0002-7460-9412; Aruguete, Mara S./0000-0003-0588-1516; Ghaemi, Zahra/0000-0003-2058-5651; Khanzadeh, Abbas Ali Hossein/0000-0003-4060-0011; Zsila, Ágnes/0000-0002-8291-5997} } @article{MTMT:34722977, title = {Religiosity: Its Link to Filipinos’ Knowledge, Attitudes, and Beliefs about Transgender Individuals}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34722977}, author = {Reyes, M. E. S. and Amoranto, E. X. M. and Castillo, A. A. T. and Co, A. M. F. D. G. and Largoza, M. E. F. M. and Romulo, J. I. I. and Soriano, B. M. A. and Aganan, J. B. and Urbán, R. and Zsila, Ágnes}, journal-iso = {N AM J PSYCH}, journal = {NORTH AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY}, volume = {26}, unique-id = {34722977}, issn = {1527-7143}, year = {2024}, pages = {1-28}, orcid-numbers = {Zsila, Ágnes/0000-0002-8291-5997} } @{MTMT:34675841, title = {Erzsébet Farkas: An Unknown Heroine and Her Wartime Mission in a Jewish Foster Home}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34675841}, author = {Szabó, Dóra}, booktitle = {Early Women Psychoanalysts: History, Biography, and Contemporary Relevance}, unique-id = {34675841}, year = {2024}, pages = {129-152} } @article{MTMT:34490832, title = {Embrace the Moment Using Social Media: A Cross-Cultural Study of Mindful Use of Social Media}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34490832}, author = {Shabahang, Reza and Zsila, Ágnes and Aruguete, Mara S. and Huynh, Ho Phi and Orosz, Gábor}, doi = {10.1007/s12671-023-02271-9}, journal-iso = {MINDFULNESS}, journal = {MINDFULNESS}, volume = {15}, unique-id = {34490832}, issn = {1868-8527}, year = {2024}, eissn = {1868-8535}, pages = {157-173}, orcid-numbers = {Shabahang, Reza/0000-0002-8717-9378; Zsila, Ágnes/0000-0002-8291-5997; Aruguete, Mara S./0000-0003-0588-1516; Huynh, Ho Phi/0000-0002-9931-7467; Orosz, Gábor/0000-0001-5883-6861} } @article{MTMT:34205698, title = {Conservatism, anti-vaccination attitudes, and intellectual humility: examining their associations through a social judgment theory framework}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34205698}, author = {Huynh, Ho Phi and Dicke-Bohmann, Amy and Zsila, Ágnes}, doi = {10.1007/s10865-023-00450-6}, journal-iso = {J BEHAV MED}, journal = {JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE}, volume = {47}, unique-id = {34205698}, issn = {0160-7715}, year = {2024}, eissn = {1573-3521}, pages = {184-196}, orcid-numbers = {Huynh, Ho Phi/0000-0002-9931-7467; Zsila, Ágnes/0000-0002-8291-5997} } @article{MTMT:34205605, title = {A misinterpreted psychoanalyst: Herbert Silberer and his theory of symbol‐formation}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34205605}, author = {Gyimesi, Júlia}, doi = {10.1002/jhbs.22289}, journal-iso = {J HIST BEHAV SCI}, journal = {JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES}, volume = {60}, unique-id = {34205605}, issn = {0022-5061}, abstract = {The primary aim of this article is to give a more detailed exposition of the cultural, personal, and theoretical contexts in which the Viennese psychoanalyst, Herbert Silberer's theories were born. When assessing the broader picture that this approach offers, it can be concluded that Silberer was an innovative thinker who inspired several of his contemporaries. Recognized in many respects by the society and scholars of this time, he represented quite a different viewpoint that was significantly influenced by several forms of Western esoteric thinking. Yet his main aim was to contribute to the field of psychoanalysis and develop a theory in which rationalistic psychoanalytic interpretations were combined with nonreductive approaches to mystical experiences. Silberer's name is frequently mentioned in a specific context in which his tragic suicide is emphasized rather than his innovations. Upon evaluating the materials recording Silberer's private life, it seems very likely that his suicide was not triggered by the criticism of Freud alone. Silberer's family affairs, his relationship with his father, and his financial and professional struggles could have all contributed to his tragic decision. This paper contends that Silberer's oeuvre deserves greater attention and must be evaluated based upon its own merit.}, year = {2024}, eissn = {1520-6696}, pages = {e22289} }