Eric Stice, Ph.D.
A major focus of Dr. Stice's research program is to design and evaluate prevention programs for eating disorders, obesity, and depression and to broadly implement them to reduce the population prevalence of these public health problems. His team created a brief body acceptance intervention that uses dissonance-induction to reduce risk for onset of eating disorders. This is the only prevention program to significantly reduce future onset of eating disorders in multiple trials. A recent trial found that it produced a 77% reduction in future onset of eating disorders over a 2-year follow-up.
This prevention program was confirmed to reduce fMRI-assessed brain reward region response to thin models. The intervention has been implemented to over 8 million adolescent girls and young women in 140 countries, including at over 250 US universities. His team also developed a highly effective cognitive behavioral depression prevention program being implemented throughout the US and UK.
In addition, his team uses brain imaging to identify neural vulnerability factors that increase risk for unhealthy weight gain and is evaluating interventions that target the identified neural vulnerability factors. He has published over 330 scientific articles and books, which have been cited over 67,000 times.
- Career Award, National Institutes of Health
- Distinguished Scientific Award for Early Career Contributions to Psychopathology, American Psychological Association
- Nan Tobler Award, Society for Prevention Research
- Lori Irving Award for Excellence in Eating Disorder Prevention and Awareness, National Eating Disorders Association