Diane M. Quinn
Professor & Department Head/Psychological Sciences
Storrs Mansfield
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Scholarly Contributions
141 Scholarly Contributions
Why Being Out About Concealable Stigmatized Identities May Benefit Health
2014
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
When ideology hurts: effects of belief in the protestant ethic and feeling overweight on the psychological well-being of women.
1999
Research Type: Journal Article
When grades determine self-worth: consequences of contingent self-worth for male and female engineering and psychology majors.
2003
Research Type: Journal Article
What are you hiding? Concealable stigmatized identities and well-being
2015
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Weight-based rejection sensitivity: Scale development and implications for well-being
2016
Research Type: Journal Article
Weight-based rejection sensitivity: Scale development and consequences for well-being
2012
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Weight stigma and posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms in individuals seeking bariatric surgery
2022
Research Type: Journal Article
Weight stigma and post traumatic stress disorder symptoms in individals seeking bariatric surgery.
2022
Research Type: Journal Article
Weight stigma and health: The mediating role of coping responses.
2018
Research Type: Journal Article
Weight Bias, Shame, and Self-Compassion: Risk/Protective Mechanisms of Depression and Anxiety in Prebariatic Surgery Patients.
2020
Research Type: Journal Article
WEIGHT STIGMATIZATION AS A RISK FACTOR FOR WEIGHT CONTROL AND HEALTH
2011
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
Vulnerability to the affective consequences of the stigma of overweight
1998
Research Type: Book Chapter
Visible and concealable stigmatized identities and mental health: Experiences of racial discrimination and anticipated stigma.
2020
Research Type: Journal Article
Virtual objectification experiences differentially affect body image concerns in men and women
2013
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Understanding the role of depressive symptoms in academic outcomes: A longitudinal study of college roommates
2023
Research Type: Journal Article