Lawrence Natalia S, Verbruggen Frederick, Morrison Sinead, Adams Rachel C, Chambers Christopher D
School of Psychology, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter EX4 4QG, UK; School of Psychology, Cardiff University, Park Place, Cardiff CF10 3AT, UK.
School of Psychology, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter EX4 4QG, UK.
Appetite. 2015 Feb;85:91-103. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2014.11.006. Epub 2014 Nov 11.
Overeating in our food-rich environment is a key contributor to obesity. Computerised response-inhibition training could improve self-control in individuals who overeat. Evidence suggests that training people to inhibit motor responses to specific food pictures can reduce the subsequent choice and consumption of those foods. Here we undertook three experiments using the stop-signal task to examine the effects of food and non-food related stop-training on immediate snack food consumption. The experiments examined whether training effects were stimulus-specific, whether they were influenced by the comparator (control) group, and whether they were moderated by individual differences in dietary restraint. Experiment 1 revealed lower intake of one food following stop- vs. double- (two key-presses) response training to food pictures. Experiment 2 offered two foods, one of which was not associated with stopping, to enable within- and between-subjects comparisons of intake. A second control condition required participants to ignore signals and respond with one key-press to all pictures. There was no overall effect of training on intake in Experiment 2, but there was a marginally significant moderation by dietary restraint: Restrained eaters ate significantly less signal-food following stop- relative to double-response training. Experiment 3 revealed that stop- vs. double-response training to non-food pictures had no effect on food intake. Taken together with previous findings, these results suggest some stimulus-specific effects of stop-training on food intake that may be moderated by individual differences in dietary restraint.
在食物丰富的环境中暴饮暴食是导致肥胖的关键因素。计算机化的反应抑制训练可以提高暴饮暴食者的自我控制能力。有证据表明,训练人们抑制对特定食物图片的运动反应可以减少随后对这些食物的选择和消费。在这里,我们进行了三项实验,使用停止信号任务来检验与食物和非食物相关的停止训练对即食零食消费的影响。这些实验考察了训练效果是否具有刺激特异性,是否受比较(对照)组的影响,以及是否受饮食节制个体差异的调节。实验1显示,对食物图片进行停止反应训练与双重(两次按键)反应训练后,一种食物的摄入量较低。实验2提供了两种食物,其中一种与停止无关,以便在受试者内和受试者间比较摄入量。第二个对照条件要求参与者忽略信号,对所有图片都按一次键做出反应。在实验2中,训练对摄入量没有总体影响,但饮食节制有一定程度的显著调节作用:相对于双重反应训练,受节制饮食者在停止反应训练后摄入的信号食物明显减少。实验3显示,对非食物图片进行停止反应训练与双重反应训练对食物摄入量没有影响。结合先前的研究结果,这些结果表明停止训练对食物摄入量有一些刺激特异性影响,可能受饮食节制个体差异的调节。