Focusing on non-low-weight eating disorders, such as bulimia nervosa, particularly in adolescence, can offer broad insight into the neurobiology of a range of eating disorders given their shared clinical features and the high rates of longitudinal diagnostic crossover (1) while obviating the complications of acute starvation. One cognitive-behavioral domain in eating disorders is self-regulatory control. By definition, bulimia nervosa involves dysregulated self-control that manifests in eating disorder symptoms such as failed dietary restraint, loss of control over eating, engagement in (often dangerous) compensatory behaviors, and inability to inhibit preoccupying thoughts about weight, shape, eating, and control. For individuals with bulimia nervosa, this dysregulation in self-control often extends beyond eating disorder symptoms to include difficulties with affect regulation, problematic substance use, self-harming behaviors, stealing, and truancy, all of which may reflect a common underlying dysregulation of self-control processes.