Howard Maxine, Roiser Jonathan P, Gilbert Sam J, Burgess Paul W, Dayan Peter, Serpell Lucy
Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Front Psychol. 2020 Jul 14;11:1644. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01644. eCollection 2020.
Previous research has shown that short-term fasting in healthy individuals is associated with changes in risky decision-making. The current experiment was designed to examine the influence of short-term fasting in healthy individuals on four types of impulsivity: reflection impulsivity, risky decision-making, delay aversion, and action inhibition. Participants were tested twice, once when fasted for 20 h, and once when satiated. Participants demonstrated impaired action inhibition when fasted; committing significantly more errors of commission during a food-related Affective Shifting Task. Participants also displayed decreased reflection impulsivity when fasted, opening significantly more boxes during the Information Sampling Task (IST). There were no significant differences in performance between fasted and satiated sessions for risky decision-making or delay aversion. These findings may have implications for understanding eating disorders such as Bulimia Nervosa (BN). Although BN has been characterized as a disorder of poor impulse control, inconsistent findings when comparing individuals with BN and healthy individuals on behavioral measures of impulsivity question this characterization. Since individuals with BN undergo periods of short-term fasting, the inconsistent findings could be due to differences in the levels of satiation of participants. The current results indicate that fasting can selectively influence performance on the IST, a measure of impulsivity previously studied in BN. However, the results from the IST were contrary to the original hypothesis and should be replicated before specific conclusions can be made.
先前的研究表明,健康个体的短期禁食与风险决策的变化有关。当前的实验旨在研究健康个体的短期禁食对四种冲动类型的影响:反射冲动、风险决策、延迟厌恶和行动抑制。参与者接受了两次测试,一次是在禁食20小时时,一次是在饱腹时。参与者在禁食时表现出行动抑制受损;在与食物相关的情感转换任务中犯的主动错误明显更多。参与者在禁食时也表现出反射冲动降低,在信息采样任务(IST)中打开的盒子明显更多。在禁食和饱腹状态下,风险决策或延迟厌恶的表现没有显著差异。这些发现可能对理解诸如神经性贪食症(BN)等饮食失调症有启示。尽管BN被描述为一种冲动控制不良的疾病,但在比较BN患者和健康个体在冲动行为测量上的结果并不一致,这对这种描述提出了质疑。由于BN患者会经历短期禁食期,结果不一致可能是由于参与者饱腹感水平的差异。当前结果表明,禁食可以选择性地影响IST的表现,IST是先前在BN研究中使用的一种冲动测量方法。然而,IST的结果与原假设相反,在得出具体结论之前应进行重复验证。