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  • Does negative mood drive the urge to eat? The contribution of negative mood, exposure to food cues and eating style

    Author(s)
    Loxton, Natalie J
    Dawe, Sharon
    Cahill, Allison
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Loxton, Natalie J.
    Dawe, Sharon
    Year published
    2011
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    The current study investigated whether negative mood alone, or in conjunction with exposure to food cues, influences the urge to eat. Female participants (N = 160) were allocated to either a negative or neutral mood induction procedure followed by exposure to either a preferred food cue or a non-food cue. Participants reported their urge to eat at baseline, following the mood induction procedure, and following the cue exposure, as well as completing measures of restrained and disinhibited eating. Contrary to prediction, urge to eat decreased following the mood induction procedure for those in the negative mood condition. ...
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    The current study investigated whether negative mood alone, or in conjunction with exposure to food cues, influences the urge to eat. Female participants (N = 160) were allocated to either a negative or neutral mood induction procedure followed by exposure to either a preferred food cue or a non-food cue. Participants reported their urge to eat at baseline, following the mood induction procedure, and following the cue exposure, as well as completing measures of restrained and disinhibited eating. Contrary to prediction, urge to eat decreased following the mood induction procedure for those in the negative mood condition. This was not influenced by eating style (i.e., restrained or disinhibited eaters). Urge to eat subsequently increased following exposure to the food, but not the non-food, cue. This effect was moderated by negative mood and eating style with disinhibited eating being positively associated with urge to eat for those women in the negative mood condition. These findings suggest that negative mood plays a role in the tendency to overeat, but only in the context of personally desirable food cues and for a subgroup of women with a history of disinhibited eating. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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    Journal Title
    Appetite
    Volume
    56
    Issue
    2
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2011.01.011
    Subject
    Nutrigenomics and personalised nutrition
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/43800
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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