Resisting temptation of unhealthy food: interaction between temptation-elicited goal activation and self-control

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Haynes, Ashleigh
Kemps, Eva
Moffitt, Robyn
Mohr, Philip
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2014
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Abstract

Counteractive control theory suggests that the cognitive accessibility of a goal in response to a temptation cue predicts self-regulation of behaviour consistent with that goal. The current study provided a novel test of this effect in the eating domain, exploring the moderating role of trait self-control. A sample of 124 women (18–25 years) completed a lexical decision task to assess cognitive accessibility of the weight-management goal after food temptation priming. Eating self-regulation was operationalised as unhealthy snack food intake measured in a task disguised as a taste-test. Participants completed trait self-control and temptation experience intensity measures. Cognitive accessibility predicted lower food intake, but only among high self-control participants. The relationship was mediated by temptation experience intensity: participants with high cognitive accessibility felt less tempted, and subsequently ate less food. Results suggest that changing the processes underlying the temptation experience, rather than the cognitive accessibility of a goal may more effectively enhance self-regulation among low self-control individuals.

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Motivation and Emotion
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© 2014 Springer Netherlands. This is an electronic version of an article published in Motivation and Emotion, Volume 38, Issue 4, pp 485–495, 2014. Motivation and Emotion is available online at: http://link.springer.com// with the open URL of your article.
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Cognitive and computational psychology
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