Bongers Peggy, van de Giessen Elsmarieke, Roefs Anne, Nederkoorn Chantal, Booij Jan, van den Brink Wim, Jansen Anita
Department of Clinical Psychological Science, Maastricht University.
Department of Nuclear Medicine, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam.
Health Psychol. 2015 Jun;34(6):677-85. doi: 10.1037/hea0000167. Epub 2014 Nov 3.
Overeating and obesity are associated with impulsivity. In studies among patients with a substance use disorder, impulsivity was found to be associated with substance-related attentional bias. This study examined whether obesity, impulsivity and food craving are associated with an attentional bias for high-calorie food.
Obese (n = 185, mean BMI = 38.18 ± 6.17) and matched healthy-weight (n = 134, mean BMI = 22.35 ± 1.63) men (27.9%) and women (72.1%), aged 18-45 years, took part in the study. Participants were tested on several self-report and behavioral measures of impulsivity (i.e., response inhibition and reward sensitivity) and self-reported trait craving. In addition, they performed a visual search task to measure attentional bias for high- and low-caloric foods.
Self-reported impulsivity influenced the relationship between weight status and detection speed of high- and low-caloric food items: High-impulsive participants with obesity were significantly faster than high-impulsive healthy-weight participants in detecting a high-caloric food item among neutral items, whereas no such difference was observed among low-impulsive participants. No significant effects were found on low-caloric food items, for trait craving or any of the behavioral measures of impulsivity.
Self-reported impulsivity, but not trait craving or behavioral measures of impulsivity, is associated with an attentional bias for high-caloric foods, but only in people with obesity. It is in particular the speedy detection of high-caloric foods in the environment that characterizes the impulsive person with obesity, which in turn may cause risky eating patterns in a society were high-caloric food is overly present.
暴饮暴食和肥胖与冲动性有关。在物质使用障碍患者的研究中,发现冲动性与物质相关的注意力偏向有关。本研究探讨肥胖、冲动性和食物渴望是否与高热量食物的注意力偏向有关。
185名肥胖者(平均BMI = 38.18 ± 6.17)和134名匹配的健康体重者(平均BMI = 22.35 ± 1.63),年龄在18 - 45岁之间,男性占27.9%,女性占72.1%,参与了这项研究。参与者接受了多项关于冲动性的自我报告和行为测量(即反应抑制和奖励敏感性)以及自我报告的特质渴望测试。此外,他们还进行了一项视觉搜索任务,以测量对高热量和低热量食物的注意力偏向。
自我报告的冲动性影响了体重状况与高热量和低热量食物项目检测速度之间的关系:在中性项目中检测高热量食物时,高冲动性的肥胖参与者比高冲动性的健康体重参与者明显更快,而低冲动性参与者之间未观察到这种差异。在低热量食物项目、特质渴望或任何冲动性行为测量方面未发现显著影响。
自我报告的冲动性,而非特质渴望或冲动性行为测量,与高热量食物的注意力偏向有关,但仅在肥胖人群中如此。尤其是在环境中能够快速检测到高热量食物,这是肥胖冲动者的特征,这反过来可能在高热量食物过度存在的社会中导致危险的饮食模式。