Houben Katrijn, Dibbets Pauline
Clinical Psychological Science, Maastricht University, the Netherlands.
Clinical Psychological Science, Maastricht University, the Netherlands.
Appetite. 2025 Apr 1;208:107932. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2025.107932. Epub 2025 Feb 26.
In today's "obesogenic" environment, Pavlovian cues signaling the availability of high-calorie foods may elicit strong expectancies of eating and food cravings. Such cue-elicited appetitive responses, collectively referred to as food cue reactivity, may foster overeating and weight gain. Moreover, food-related cues may also elicit instrumental actions aimed at obtaining those foods via Pavlovian-to-Instrumental Transfer (PIT). This study compared extinction and counterconditioning in reducing food cue reactivity, measured by outcome expectancies, craving, and liking, as well as in decreasing outcome-specific PIT. We used a three-phase PIT paradigm: In the first two phases, participants learned Pavlovian associations between two conditioned stimuli (CSs+) and two food outcomes, and instrumental associations between two responses and the same outcomes. An additional stimulus was never paired with food outcomes (CS-). Participants then underwent either extinction or counterconditioning for one CS+ while the other CS+ remained unchanged, or received no additional learning (control). In the test phase, instrumental responding was measured in the presence and absence of Pavlovian stimuli. In all phases, we measured outcome expectancies, craving and liking of the Pavlovian stimuli. Both extinction and counterconditioning reduced cue-elicited outcome expectancies, but only counterconditioning significantly decreased CS+ liking. Neither procedure effectively reduced cue-elicited craving. Outcome-specific PIT was observed across conditions, though counterconditioning lead to a general decrease in instrumental responding to all stimuli in the test phase. These findings suggest that counterconditioning more effectively targets the affective value of conditioned stimuli and reduces food cue reactivity compared to extinction, though its impact on PIT warrants further investigation.
在当今的“致肥胖”环境中,表明高热量食物可得性的巴甫洛夫线索可能会引发强烈的进食预期和食物渴望。这种由线索引发的食欲反应,统称为食物线索反应性,可能会促进暴饮暴食和体重增加。此外,与食物相关的线索还可能引发旨在通过巴甫洛夫到工具性转移(PIT)获得这些食物的工具性行动。本研究比较了消退和反条件作用在降低食物线索反应性方面的效果,食物线索反应性通过结果预期、渴望和喜好来衡量,同时也比较了它们在减少特定结果的PIT方面的效果。我们使用了一个三阶段的PIT范式:在前两个阶段,参与者学习了两个条件刺激(CS+)与两种食物结果之间的巴甫洛夫关联,以及两种反应与相同结果之间的工具性关联。另一个刺激从未与食物结果配对(CS-)。然后,参与者对其中一个CS+进行消退或反条件作用,而另一个CS+保持不变,或者不接受额外的学习(对照组)。在测试阶段,在有和没有巴甫洛夫刺激的情况下测量工具性反应。在所有阶段,我们测量了对巴甫洛夫刺激的结果预期、渴望和喜好。消退和反条件作用都降低了线索引发的结果预期,但只有反条件作用显著降低了CS+的喜好。两种方法都没有有效地降低线索引发的渴望。在所有条件下都观察到了特定结果的PIT,尽管反条件作用导致测试阶段对所有刺激的工具性反应普遍减少。这些发现表明,与消退相比,反条件作用更有效地针对条件刺激的情感价值并降低食物线索反应性,尽管其对PIT的影响值得进一步研究。