Id |
Subject |
Object |
Predicate |
Lexical cue |
T100 |
0-4 |
Sentence |
denotes |
3.4. |
T101 |
5-88 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Emotional Eating in Relation to COVID-19-Related Worries and Psychological Distress |
T102 |
89-210 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Female participants were more inclined than men to report emotional eating (OR 1.9 (CI95% 1.8–2.0)), as shown in Table 2. |
T103 |
211-356 |
Sentence |
denotes |
When comparing participants in the age group between 18 and 30 years, those in older age categories predominantly reported less emotional eating. |
T104 |
357-470 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Conversely, participants aged 30–39 years were more inclined to report emotional eating (OR 1.3 (CI95% 1.1–1.4)). |
T105 |
471-702 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Substantial health-related worry was weakly associated with emotional eating (OR 1.3 (CI95% 1.2–1.5)), whereas substantial worry related to personal economy had a stronger association with emotional eating (OR 1.7 (CI95% 1.5–1.9)). |
T106 |
703-816 |
Sentence |
denotes |
The strongest association was found between psychological distress and emotional eating (OR 4.2 (CI95% 3.9–4.4)). |