Skip to main content
Erschienen in: Current Obesity Reports 1/2017

15.02.2017 | Psychological Issues (M Hetherington and V Drapeau, Section Editors)

Restrained Eating and Food Cues: Recent Findings and Conclusions

verfasst von: Janet Polivy, C. Peter Herman

Erschienen in: Current Obesity Reports | Ausgabe 1/2017

Einloggen, um Zugang zu erhalten

Abstract

Purpose of Review

The purposes of the present review are to organize the recent literature on the effects of food cues on restrained and unrestrained eaters and to determine current directions in such work.

Recent Findings

Research over the last several years involves both replicating the work showing that restrained eaters respond to attractive food cues by eating more but unrestrained eaters show less responsiveness and extending this work to examine the mechanisms that might underlie this differential responsiveness. Labeling a food as healthy encourages more eating by restrained eaters, while diet-priming cues seem to curtail their consumption even in the face of attractive food cues. Work on cognitive responses indicates that restrained (but not unrestrained) eaters have both attention and memory biases toward food cues.

Summary

Restrained eaters attend more strongly to food- and diet-related cues than do unrestrained eaters, as evidenced in both their eating behavior and their attention and memory responses to such cues. These effects interact with expectations and manner of presentation of such cues. What remains to be understood is the meaning and mechanism of the attention bias toward food cues in restrained eaters and the implications of such bias for overeating and overweight more broadly speaking.
Literatur
1.
Zurück zum Zitat Herman CP, Polivy J. Anxiety, restraint, and eating behavior. J Abnorm Psychol. 1975;84:666–72.CrossRef Herman CP, Polivy J. Anxiety, restraint, and eating behavior. J Abnorm Psychol. 1975;84:666–72.CrossRef
2.
Zurück zum Zitat Herman CP, Polivy J. External cues in the control of food intake in humans: the sensory-normative distinction. Physiol Behav. 2008;94:722–8.CrossRefPubMed Herman CP, Polivy J. External cues in the control of food intake in humans: the sensory-normative distinction. Physiol Behav. 2008;94:722–8.CrossRefPubMed
3.
Zurück zum Zitat Shimizu M, Wansink B. Watching food-related television increases caloric intake in restrained eaters. Appetite. 2011;57:661–4.CrossRefPubMed Shimizu M, Wansink B. Watching food-related television increases caloric intake in restrained eaters. Appetite. 2011;57:661–4.CrossRefPubMed
4.
Zurück zum Zitat Veenstra EM, de Jong PJ. Restrained eaters show enhanced automatic approach tendencies towards food. Appetite. 2010;55:30–6.CrossRefPubMed Veenstra EM, de Jong PJ. Restrained eaters show enhanced automatic approach tendencies towards food. Appetite. 2010;55:30–6.CrossRefPubMed
5.
Zurück zum Zitat Herman CP, Polivy J. The self-regulation of eating: theoretical and practical problems. In: Vohs KD, Baumeister RF, editors. Handbook of self-regulation: research, theory, and applications. 2nd ed. New York: Guilford; 2011. p. 522–36. Herman CP, Polivy J. The self-regulation of eating: theoretical and practical problems. In: Vohs KD, Baumeister RF, editors. Handbook of self-regulation: research, theory, and applications. 2nd ed. New York: Guilford; 2011. p. 522–36.
6.
Zurück zum Zitat Polivy J, Herman CP, Deo R. Getting a bigger slice of the pie: effects on eating and emotion in restrained and unrestrained eaters. Appetite. 2010;55:426–30.CrossRefPubMed Polivy J, Herman CP, Deo R. Getting a bigger slice of the pie: effects on eating and emotion in restrained and unrestrained eaters. Appetite. 2010;55:426–30.CrossRefPubMed
7.
Zurück zum Zitat Coelho J, Nederkoorn C, Jansen A. Acute versus repeated chocolate exposure: effects on intake and cravings in restrained and unrestrained eaters. J Health Psychol. 2014;19:482–90.CrossRefPubMed Coelho J, Nederkoorn C, Jansen A. Acute versus repeated chocolate exposure: effects on intake and cravings in restrained and unrestrained eaters. J Health Psychol. 2014;19:482–90.CrossRefPubMed
8.
Zurück zum Zitat Van Koningsbruggen GM, Stroebe W, Aarts H. Mere exposure to palatable food cues reduces restrained eaters’ physical effort to obtain healthy food. Appetite. 2012;58:593–6.CrossRefPubMed Van Koningsbruggen GM, Stroebe W, Aarts H. Mere exposure to palatable food cues reduces restrained eaters’ physical effort to obtain healthy food. Appetite. 2012;58:593–6.CrossRefPubMed
9.
Zurück zum Zitat Gravel K, Doucet E, Herman CP, Pomerleau S, Bourlaud A-S, Provencher V. “Healthy”, “diet”, or “hedonic”. How nutrition claims affect food-related perceptions and intake? Appetite. 2012;59:877–84.CrossRefPubMed Gravel K, Doucet E, Herman CP, Pomerleau S, Bourlaud A-S, Provencher V. “Healthy”, “diet”, or “hedonic”. How nutrition claims affect food-related perceptions and intake? Appetite. 2012;59:877–84.CrossRefPubMed
10.
Zurück zum Zitat Provencher V, Polivy J, Herman CP. Impact of perceived healthiness of food on intake: if it’s healthy, you can eat more! Appetite. 2009;52:340–4.CrossRefPubMed Provencher V, Polivy J, Herman CP. Impact of perceived healthiness of food on intake: if it’s healthy, you can eat more! Appetite. 2009;52:340–4.CrossRefPubMed
11.
Zurück zum Zitat Lwin MO, Morrin M, Tang SWH, Low JY, Nguyen T, Lee WX. See the seal? Understanding restrained eaters’ responses to nutritional messages on food packaging. Health Commun. 2014;29:745–61.CrossRefPubMed Lwin MO, Morrin M, Tang SWH, Low JY, Nguyen T, Lee WX. See the seal? Understanding restrained eaters’ responses to nutritional messages on food packaging. Health Commun. 2014;29:745–61.CrossRefPubMed
12.
Zurück zum Zitat Cavanaugh KV, Kruja B, Forestell CA. The effect of brand and caloric information on flavor perception and food consumption in restrained and unrestrained eaters. Appetite. 2014;82:1–7.CrossRef Cavanaugh KV, Kruja B, Forestell CA. The effect of brand and caloric information on flavor perception and food consumption in restrained and unrestrained eaters. Appetite. 2014;82:1–7.CrossRef
13.
Zurück zum Zitat Girz L, Polivy J, Herman CP, Lee HH. The effects of calorie information on food selection and intake. Int J Obes. 2012;36:1340–5.CrossRef Girz L, Polivy J, Herman CP, Lee HH. The effects of calorie information on food selection and intake. Int J Obes. 2012;36:1340–5.CrossRef
14.
Zurück zum Zitat Krahe B, Krause C. Presenting thin media models affects women’s choice of diet or normal snacks. Psychol Women Q. 2010;34:349–55.CrossRef Krahe B, Krause C. Presenting thin media models affects women’s choice of diet or normal snacks. Psychol Women Q. 2010;34:349–55.CrossRef
15.
Zurück zum Zitat Boyce JA, Kuijer RG. Focusing on media body ideal images triggers food intake among restrained eaters: a test of restraint theory and the elaboration likelihood model. Eat Behav. 2014;15:262–70.CrossRefPubMed Boyce JA, Kuijer RG. Focusing on media body ideal images triggers food intake among restrained eaters: a test of restraint theory and the elaboration likelihood model. Eat Behav. 2014;15:262–70.CrossRefPubMed
16.
Zurück zum Zitat Jiang M, Vartanian LR. Attention and memory biases toward body-related images among restrained eaters. Body Image. 2012;9:503–9.CrossRefPubMed Jiang M, Vartanian LR. Attention and memory biases toward body-related images among restrained eaters. Body Image. 2012;9:503–9.CrossRefPubMed
17.
Zurück zum Zitat Papies EK, Nicolaije KAH. Inspiration or deflation? Feeling similar or dissimilar to slim and plus-size models affects self-evaluation of restrained eaters. Body Image. 2012;9:76–85.CrossRefPubMed Papies EK, Nicolaije KAH. Inspiration or deflation? Feeling similar or dissimilar to slim and plus-size models affects self-evaluation of restrained eaters. Body Image. 2012;9:76–85.CrossRefPubMed
18.
Zurück zum Zitat Fedoroff I, Polivy J, Herman CP. The specificity of restrained versus unrestrained eaters’ responses to food cues: general desire to eat, or craving for the cued food? Appetite. 2003;41:7–13.CrossRefPubMed Fedoroff I, Polivy J, Herman CP. The specificity of restrained versus unrestrained eaters’ responses to food cues: general desire to eat, or craving for the cued food? Appetite. 2003;41:7–13.CrossRefPubMed
19.
Zurück zum Zitat Kemps E, Herman CP, Hollitt S, Polivy J, Prichard I, Tiggemann M. The role of expectations in the effect of food cue exposure on intake. Appetite. 2016;103:259–64.CrossRefPubMed Kemps E, Herman CP, Hollitt S, Polivy J, Prichard I, Tiggemann M. The role of expectations in the effect of food cue exposure on intake. Appetite. 2016;103:259–64.CrossRefPubMed
20.
Zurück zum Zitat Fishbach A, Zheng Y, Trope Y. Counteractive evaluation: asymmetric shifts in the implicit value of conflicting motivations. J Exp Soc Psychol. 2010;46:29–38.CrossRef Fishbach A, Zheng Y, Trope Y. Counteractive evaluation: asymmetric shifts in the implicit value of conflicting motivations. J Exp Soc Psychol. 2010;46:29–38.CrossRef
21.
Zurück zum Zitat Papies EK, Hamstra P. Goal priming and eating behavior: enhancing self-regulation by environmental cues. Health Psychol. 2010;29:384–8.CrossRefPubMed Papies EK, Hamstra P. Goal priming and eating behavior: enhancing self-regulation by environmental cues. Health Psychol. 2010;29:384–8.CrossRefPubMed
22.
Zurück zum Zitat Buckland NJ, Finlayson G, Hetherington M. Pre-exposure to diet-congruent food reduces energy intake in restrained dieting women. Eat Behav. 2013;14:249–54.CrossRefPubMed Buckland NJ, Finlayson G, Hetherington M. Pre-exposure to diet-congruent food reduces energy intake in restrained dieting women. Eat Behav. 2013;14:249–54.CrossRefPubMed
23.
Zurück zum Zitat • Buckland NJ, Finlayson G, Edge R, Hetherington M. Resistance reminders: dieters reduce energy intake after exposure to diet-congruent food images compared to control non-food images. Appetite. 2014;73:189–96. Demonstrates that the usual increased eating by dieters exposed to food cues can be curtailed by diet-related food images.CrossRefPubMed • Buckland NJ, Finlayson G, Edge R, Hetherington M. Resistance reminders: dieters reduce energy intake after exposure to diet-congruent food images compared to control non-food images. Appetite. 2014;73:189–96. Demonstrates that the usual increased eating by dieters exposed to food cues can be curtailed by diet-related food images.CrossRefPubMed
24.
Zurück zum Zitat Kemps E, Herman CP, Hollitt S, Polivy J, Prichard I, Tiggemann M. Contextual cue exposure effects on food intake in restrained eaters. Physiol Behav. 2016;167:71–5.CrossRefPubMed Kemps E, Herman CP, Hollitt S, Polivy J, Prichard I, Tiggemann M. Contextual cue exposure effects on food intake in restrained eaters. Physiol Behav. 2016;167:71–5.CrossRefPubMed
25.
Zurück zum Zitat Minas RK, Poor M, Dennis AR, Bartelt VL. A prime a day keeps calories away: the effects of supraliminal priming on food consumption and the moderating role of gender and eating restraint. Appetite. 2016;105:494–9.CrossRefPubMed Minas RK, Poor M, Dennis AR, Bartelt VL. A prime a day keeps calories away: the effects of supraliminal priming on food consumption and the moderating role of gender and eating restraint. Appetite. 2016;105:494–9.CrossRefPubMed
26.
Zurück zum Zitat • Herman CP, Polivy J, Pliner P, Vartanian LR. Mechanisms underlying the portion-size effect. Physiol Behav. 2015;144:129–36. A theoretical review discussing the underlying mechanisms for the well-documented portion size effect, and presenting more convincing alternatives to the prevailing “appropriateness” view.CrossRef • Herman CP, Polivy J, Pliner P, Vartanian LR. Mechanisms underlying the portion-size effect. Physiol Behav. 2015;144:129–36. A theoretical review discussing the underlying mechanisms for the well-documented portion size effect, and presenting more convincing alternatives to the prevailing “appropriateness” view.CrossRef
27.
Zurück zum Zitat Holden SS, Zlatevska N. The partitioning paradox: the big bite around small packages. Int J Res Mark. 2015;32:230–3.CrossRef Holden SS, Zlatevska N. The partitioning paradox: the big bite around small packages. Int J Res Mark. 2015;32:230–3.CrossRef
28.
Zurück zum Zitat Versluis I, Papies EK. Eating less from bigger packs: preventing the pack size effect with diet primes. Appetite. 2016;100:70–9.CrossRefPubMed Versluis I, Papies EK. Eating less from bigger packs: preventing the pack size effect with diet primes. Appetite. 2016;100:70–9.CrossRefPubMed
29.
Zurück zum Zitat Hollitt S, Kemps E, Tiggemann M, Smeets E, Mills JS. Components of attentional bias for food cues among restrained eaters. Appetite. 2010;54:309–13.CrossRefPubMed Hollitt S, Kemps E, Tiggemann M, Smeets E, Mills JS. Components of attentional bias for food cues among restrained eaters. Appetite. 2010;54:309–13.CrossRefPubMed
30.
Zurück zum Zitat Meule A, Lukito S, Vogele D, Kubler A. Enhanced behavioral inhibition in restrained eaters. Eat Behav. 2011;12:152–5.CrossRefPubMed Meule A, Lukito S, Vogele D, Kubler A. Enhanced behavioral inhibition in restrained eaters. Eat Behav. 2011;12:152–5.CrossRefPubMed
31.
Zurück zum Zitat Meule A, Vogele D, Kubler A. Restrained eating is related to accelerated reaction to high caloric foods and cardiac autonomic dysregulation. Appetite. 2012;58:638–44.CrossRefPubMed Meule A, Vogele D, Kubler A. Restrained eating is related to accelerated reaction to high caloric foods and cardiac autonomic dysregulation. Appetite. 2012;58:638–44.CrossRefPubMed
32.
Zurück zum Zitat Neimeijer RA, de Jong PJ, Roefs A. Temporal attention for visual food stimuli in restrained eaters. Appetite. 2013;64:5–11.CrossRefPubMed Neimeijer RA, de Jong PJ, Roefs A. Temporal attention for visual food stimuli in restrained eaters. Appetite. 2013;64:5–11.CrossRefPubMed
33.
Zurück zum Zitat Westenhoefer J, Engel D, Holst C, Lorenz J, Peacock M, Stubbs J, et al. Cognitive and weight-related correlates of flexible and rigid restrained eating behaviour. Eat Behav. 2013;14:69–72.CrossRefPubMed Westenhoefer J, Engel D, Holst C, Lorenz J, Peacock M, Stubbs J, et al. Cognitive and weight-related correlates of flexible and rigid restrained eating behaviour. Eat Behav. 2013;14:69–72.CrossRefPubMed
34.
Zurück zum Zitat Higgs S, Dolmans D, Humphreys GW, Rutters F. Dietary self-control influences top–down guidance of attention to food cues. Front Psychol. 2015. Higgs S, Dolmans D, Humphreys GW, Rutters F. Dietary self-control influences top–down guidance of attention to food cues. Front Psychol. 2015.
35.
Zurück zum Zitat Werthmann J, Jansen A, Roefs A. Make up your mind about food: a healthy mindset attenuates attention for high-calorie food in restrained eaters. Appetite. 2016;105:53–9.CrossRefPubMed Werthmann J, Jansen A, Roefs A. Make up your mind about food: a healthy mindset attenuates attention for high-calorie food in restrained eaters. Appetite. 2016;105:53–9.CrossRefPubMed
36.
Zurück zum Zitat Forestell CA, Lau P, Gyurovski II, Dickter CL, Haque SS. Attentional biases to foods: the effects of caloric content and cognitive restraint. Appetite. 2012;59:748–54.CrossRefPubMed Forestell CA, Lau P, Gyurovski II, Dickter CL, Haque SS. Attentional biases to foods: the effects of caloric content and cognitive restraint. Appetite. 2012;59:748–54.CrossRefPubMed
37.
Zurück zum Zitat Hotham S, Sharma D, Hamilton-West K. Restrained eaters preserve top-down attentional control in the presence of food. Appetite. 2012;58:1160–3.CrossRefPubMed Hotham S, Sharma D, Hamilton-West K. Restrained eaters preserve top-down attentional control in the presence of food. Appetite. 2012;58:1160–3.CrossRefPubMed
38.
Zurück zum Zitat Freijy T, Mullan B, Sharpe L. Food-related attentional bias. Word versus pictorial stimuli and the importance of stimuli calorific value in the dot probe task. Appetite. 2014;83:202–8.CrossRefPubMed Freijy T, Mullan B, Sharpe L. Food-related attentional bias. Word versus pictorial stimuli and the importance of stimuli calorific value in the dot probe task. Appetite. 2014;83:202–8.CrossRefPubMed
39.
Zurück zum Zitat Yeomans M, Brace A. Cued to act on impulse: more impulsive choice and risky decision making by women susceptible to overeating after exposure to food stimuli. PLoS ONE. 2015;10:e0137626.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral Yeomans M, Brace A. Cued to act on impulse: more impulsive choice and risky decision making by women susceptible to overeating after exposure to food stimuli. PLoS ONE. 2015;10:e0137626.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral
40.
Zurück zum Zitat • Werthmann J, Jansen A, Roefs A. Worry or craving? A selective review of evidence for food-related attention biases in obese individuals, eating-disorder patients, restrained eaters and healthy samples. Proc Nutr Soc. 2015;74:99–114. A review examining whether obesity, eating disorders, and restrained eating are related to attention biases for food and if this affects food consumption, which concludes that motivations are also important influences.CrossRefPubMed • Werthmann J, Jansen A, Roefs A. Worry or craving? A selective review of evidence for food-related attention biases in obese individuals, eating-disorder patients, restrained eaters and healthy samples. Proc Nutr Soc. 2015;74:99–114. A review examining whether obesity, eating disorders, and restrained eating are related to attention biases for food and if this affects food consumption, which concludes that motivations are also important influences.CrossRefPubMed
41.
Zurück zum Zitat Heatherton TF, Herman CP, Polivy J, King GA, McGree T. The (mis)measurement of restraint: an analysis of conceptual and psychometric issues. J Abnorm Psychol. 1988;97:19–28.CrossRefPubMed Heatherton TF, Herman CP, Polivy J, King GA, McGree T. The (mis)measurement of restraint: an analysis of conceptual and psychometric issues. J Abnorm Psychol. 1988;97:19–28.CrossRefPubMed
42.
Zurück zum Zitat Houben K, Roefs A, Jansen A. Guilty pleasures II: restrained eaters’ implicit preferences for high, moderate and low-caloric food. Eat Behav. 2012;13:275–7.CrossRefPubMed Houben K, Roefs A, Jansen A. Guilty pleasures II: restrained eaters’ implicit preferences for high, moderate and low-caloric food. Eat Behav. 2012;13:275–7.CrossRefPubMed
43.
Zurück zum Zitat Storr SM, Sparks P. Does self-affirmation following ego depletion moderate restrained eaters’ explicit preferences for, and implicit associations with, high-calorie foods? Psychol Heal. 2016;31:840–56.CrossRef Storr SM, Sparks P. Does self-affirmation following ego depletion moderate restrained eaters’ explicit preferences for, and implicit associations with, high-calorie foods? Psychol Heal. 2016;31:840–56.CrossRef
44.
Zurück zum Zitat Ball CT, Singer S, Kemps E, Tiggemann M. Restrained eating and memory specificity. Appetite. 2010;55:359–62.CrossRefPubMed Ball CT, Singer S, Kemps E, Tiggemann M. Restrained eating and memory specificity. Appetite. 2010;55:359–62.CrossRefPubMed
45.
46.
Zurück zum Zitat Soetens B, Roets A, Raes F. “Food for memory”: pictorial food-related memory bias and the role of thought suppression in high and low restrained eaters. Psychol Rec. 2014;64:105–14.CrossRef Soetens B, Roets A, Raes F. “Food for memory”: pictorial food-related memory bias and the role of thought suppression in high and low restrained eaters. Psychol Rec. 2014;64:105–14.CrossRef
47.
Zurück zum Zitat • Stroebe W, Von Koningsbruggen GM, Papies EK, Aarts H. Why most dieters fail but some succeed: a goal conflict model of eating behavior. Psychol Rev. 2013;120:110–38. Presents a new theory to explain why dieters so often fail to meet their goals, proposing a model of conflicting goals for weight control versus eating enjoyment.CrossRefPubMed • Stroebe W, Von Koningsbruggen GM, Papies EK, Aarts H. Why most dieters fail but some succeed: a goal conflict model of eating behavior. Psychol Rev. 2013;120:110–38. Presents a new theory to explain why dieters so often fail to meet their goals, proposing a model of conflicting goals for weight control versus eating enjoyment.CrossRefPubMed
48.
Zurück zum Zitat Kleiman T, Hassin RR, Trope Y. The control-freak mind: stereotypical biases are eliminated following conflict-activated cognitive control. J Exp Psychol Gen. 2014;143:498–503.CrossRefPubMed Kleiman T, Hassin RR, Trope Y. The control-freak mind: stereotypical biases are eliminated following conflict-activated cognitive control. J Exp Psychol Gen. 2014;143:498–503.CrossRefPubMed
Metadaten
Titel
Restrained Eating and Food Cues: Recent Findings and Conclusions
verfasst von
Janet Polivy
C. Peter Herman
Publikationsdatum
15.02.2017
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Current Obesity Reports / Ausgabe 1/2017
Elektronische ISSN: 2162-4968
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13679-017-0243-1

Weitere Artikel der Ausgabe 1/2017

Current Obesity Reports 1/2017 Zur Ausgabe

Etiology of Obesity (T Gill, Section Editor)

Portion Size: Latest Developments and Interventions

Leitlinien kompakt für die Innere Medizin

Mit medbee Pocketcards sicher entscheiden.

Seit 2022 gehört die medbee GmbH zum Springer Medizin Verlag

Notfall-TEP der Hüfte ist auch bei 90-Jährigen machbar

26.04.2024 Hüft-TEP Nachrichten

Ob bei einer Notfalloperation nach Schenkelhalsfraktur eine Hemiarthroplastik oder eine totale Endoprothese (TEP) eingebaut wird, sollte nicht allein vom Alter der Patientinnen und Patienten abhängen. Auch über 90-Jährige können von der TEP profitieren.

Niedriger diastolischer Blutdruck erhöht Risiko für schwere kardiovaskuläre Komplikationen

25.04.2024 Hypotonie Nachrichten

Wenn unter einer medikamentösen Hochdrucktherapie der diastolische Blutdruck in den Keller geht, steigt das Risiko für schwere kardiovaskuläre Ereignisse: Darauf deutet eine Sekundäranalyse der SPRINT-Studie hin.

Bei schweren Reaktionen auf Insektenstiche empfiehlt sich eine spezifische Immuntherapie

Insektenstiche sind bei Erwachsenen die häufigsten Auslöser einer Anaphylaxie. Einen wirksamen Schutz vor schweren anaphylaktischen Reaktionen bietet die allergenspezifische Immuntherapie. Jedoch kommt sie noch viel zu selten zum Einsatz.

Therapiestart mit Blutdrucksenkern erhöht Frakturrisiko

25.04.2024 Hypertonie Nachrichten

Beginnen ältere Männer im Pflegeheim eine Antihypertensiva-Therapie, dann ist die Frakturrate in den folgenden 30 Tagen mehr als verdoppelt. Besonders häufig stürzen Demenzkranke und Männer, die erstmals Blutdrucksenker nehmen. Dafür spricht eine Analyse unter US-Veteranen.

Update Innere Medizin

Bestellen Sie unseren Fach-Newsletter und bleiben Sie gut informiert.