Institute of Psychology, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Appetite. 2010 Apr;54(2):243-54. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2009.11.004. Epub 2009 Nov 14.
Starting from an addiction model of obesity, the present study examined differences in attention for food-related stimuli and food intake between overweight/obese and normal-weight women under conditions of hunger and satiety. Twenty-six overweight/obese (BMI: 30.00+/-4.62) and 40 normal-weight (BMI: 20.63+/-1.14) females were randomly assigned to a condition of hunger or satiety. Three indexes of attention were employed, all including pictures of food items: an eye-tracking paradigm (gaze direction and duration), a visual probe task (reaction times), and a recording of electrophysiological brain activity (amplitude of the P300 event-related potential). In addition, the acute food intake of participants was assessed using a bogus taste task. In general, an attentional bias towards food pictures was found in all participants. No differences between groups or conditions were observed in the eye-tracking data. The visual probe task revealed an enhanced automatic orientation towards food cues in hungry versus satiated, and in overweight/obese versus normal-weight individuals, but no differences between groups or conditions in maintained attention. The P300 amplitude showed that only in normal-weight participants the intentional allocation of attention to food pictures was enhanced in hunger versus satiety. In hungry overweight/obese participants, the P300 bias for food pictures was not clearly present, although an increased food intake was observed especially in this group. In conclusion, various attention-related tasks yielded various results, suggesting that they measure different underlying processes. Strikingly, overweight/obese individuals appear to automatically direct their attention to food-related stimuli, to a greater extent than normal-weight individuals, particularly when food-deprived. Speculatively, hungry overweight/obese individuals also appear to use cognitive strategies to reduce a maintained attentional bias for food stimuli, perhaps in an attempt to prevent disinhibited food intake. However, in order to draw firm conclusions, replication studies are needed.
从肥胖的成瘾模型出发,本研究在饥饿和饱腹感条件下,考察了超重/肥胖女性与正常体重女性对食物相关刺激和食物摄入的注意力差异。26 名超重/肥胖者(BMI:30.00+/-4.62)和 40 名正常体重者(BMI:20.63+/-1.14)被随机分配到饥饿或饱腹感条件下。采用三种注意力指标,均包含食物图片:眼动追踪范式(注视方向和注视时间)、视觉探测任务(反应时间)和记录电生理大脑活动(P300 事件相关电位的振幅)。此外,还使用虚假味觉任务评估了参与者的急性食物摄入量。总体而言,所有参与者都对食物图片表现出注意力偏向。在眼动追踪数据中,组间或条件间没有差异。视觉探测任务显示,与饱腹感相比,饥饿时,超重/肥胖者和正常体重者对食物线索的自动定向增强,但组间或条件间没有维持注意力的差异。P300 振幅表明,只有在正常体重参与者中,与饱腹感相比,饥饿时对食物图片的注意力有意分配增强。在饥饿的超重/肥胖参与者中,P300 对食物图片的偏差并不明显,尽管观察到这种人群的食物摄入量增加尤其明显。总之,各种与注意力相关的任务产生了不同的结果,表明它们测量了不同的潜在过程。引人注目的是,超重/肥胖个体似乎会自动将注意力指向与食物相关的刺激,其程度大于正常体重个体,尤其是在饥饿时。推测性地,饥饿的超重/肥胖个体似乎也会使用认知策略来减少对食物刺激的维持注意力偏差,也许是为了防止抑制不住的食物摄入。然而,为了得出确凿的结论,还需要进行复制研究。