Demos Kathryn E, McCaffery Jeanne M, Thomas J Graham, Mailloux Kimberly A, Hare Todd A, Wing Rena R
Department of Psychiatry & Human Behavior, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, The Miriam Hospital, USA.
Department of Psychiatry & Human Behavior, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, The Miriam Hospital, USA.
Appetite. 2017 Jul 1;114:93-100. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2017.03.013. Epub 2017 Mar 15.
Behavioral weight loss (BWL) programs are the recommended treatment for obesity, yet it is unknown whether these programs change one's ability to use self-control in food choices and what specific mechanisms support such change. Using experimental economics methods, we investigated whether changes in dietary behavior in individuals with obesity following BWL are driven by one or more of the following potential mechanisms: changes in the perception of the 1) health or 2) taste of food items, and/or 3) shifting decision weights for health versus taste attributes. Therefore, we compared these mechanisms between obese participants and lifetime normal weight controls (NW) both before and after BWL.
Females with obesity (N = 37, mean BMI = 33.2) completed a food choice task involving health ratings, taste ratings, and decision-making pre- and post-standard BWL intervention. NW controls (N = 30, BMI = 22.4) completed the same task.
Individuals with obesity exhibited increased self-control (selecting healthier, less tasty food choices) post-treatment. However, their rates of self-control remained significantly lower than NW. We found no differences in initial health perceptions across groups, and no changes with treatment. In contrast, taste ratings and the relative value of taste versus health decreased following treatment. Although, post-treatment participants continued to perceive unhealthy foods as tastier and used less self-control than NW controls, they showed significant improvements in these domains following a BWL intervention.
To help individuals improve dietary decisions, additional research is needed to determine how to make greater changes in taste preferences and/or the assignment of value to taste versus health attributes in food choices.
行为减肥(BWL)计划是肥胖症的推荐治疗方法,但尚不清楚这些计划是否会改变一个人在食物选择中运用自我控制的能力,以及哪些具体机制支持这种改变。我们使用实验经济学方法,研究了肥胖个体在BWL后饮食行为的变化是否由以下一种或多种潜在机制驱动:1)对食物健康程度或2)口味的认知变化,和/或3)健康与口味属性的决策权重转移。因此,我们在BWL前后比较了肥胖参与者和终生正常体重对照组(NW)之间的这些机制。
肥胖女性(N = 37,平均BMI = 33.2)在标准BWL干预前后完成了一项食物选择任务,包括健康评分、口味评分和决策制定。NW对照组(N = 30,BMI = 22.4)完成了相同的任务。
肥胖个体在治疗后表现出自我控制能力增强(选择更健康、口味较差的食物)。然而,他们的自我控制率仍显著低于NW组。我们发现各组之间初始健康认知没有差异,且治疗后也没有变化。相比之下,治疗后口味评分以及口味与健康的相对价值降低。虽然治疗后参与者仍然认为不健康的食物更美味,且比NW对照组使用的自我控制更少,但他们在BWL干预后在这些方面有了显著改善。
为了帮助个体改善饮食决策,需要进一步研究以确定如何在口味偏好和/或食物选择中口味与健康属性的价值分配方面做出更大的改变。