Effects of acute psychosocial stress on attentional bias toward food, food craving, and intake in binge eating

IF 3.8 2区 医学 Q1 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Appetite Pub Date : 2026-06-01 Epub Date: 2026-01-22 DOI:10.1016/j.appet.2026.108472
Lynn Sablottny, Jessica Werthmann, Brunna Tuschen-Caffier
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Stress significantly influences eating behavior, yet individual responses vary. Binge eating – a core feature of Binge Eating Disorder and Bulimia Nervosa – is frequently triggered by acute stress. One proposed mechanism is that stress increases the motivational salience of food cues, which could promote craving and food intake. To test this idea experimentally, this study examined how stress affects attentional bias toward food, and how such changes relate to food craving and food intake in individuals with binge eating behaviors compared with individuals without binge eating. Using a mixed experimental design, 130 participants (68 with binge eating, 62 without binge eating) completed sessions with and without stress induction via a video-conference Trier Social Stress Test. Attentional bias was assessed via the Dot Probe Paradigm and eye tracking, food craving was measured via self-reports, and food intake was measured behaviorally. Stress did not significantly change attentional bias toward food, nor did it affect food intake. Stress did increase craving in the group with binge eating, indicating that stress enhanced the motivational value of food. The absence of corresponding changes in attentional bias suggests that heightened craving under stress does not necessarily translate into measurable shifts in attentional allocation toward food cues, or that stress may influence motivational processes without altering overt attentional patterns. Another possibility is that methodological restraints specific to our study design limited the detection of stress-related changes in attentional processes. Further research is needed to clarify the role of attentional processes in stress-related eating, especially regarding binge eating.
急性社会心理压力对暴饮暴食中食物注意偏向、食物渴望和摄入的影响。
压力会显著影响饮食行为,但个体的反应各不相同。暴食——暴食症和神经性贪食症的核心特征——经常是由急性压力引发的。一种被提出的机制是,压力增加了食物线索的动机显著性,这可能会促进渴望和食物摄入。为了通过实验验证这一观点,本研究考察了压力如何影响对食物的注意力偏差,以及这种变化与暴饮暴食行为个体与非暴饮暴食个体之间的食物渴望和食物摄入之间的关系。采用混合实验设计,130名参与者(68名暴食者,62名非暴食者)通过视频会议Trier社会压力测试完成了有压力诱导和没有压力诱导的会话。注意偏差通过点探针范式和眼动追踪来评估,食物渴望通过自我报告来衡量,食物摄入通过行为来衡量。压力并没有显著改变对食物的注意偏向,也没有影响食物摄入。压力确实增加了暴饮暴食组的渴望,这表明压力增强了食物的激励价值。注意偏差的相应变化的缺失表明,压力下的强烈渴望并不一定转化为对食物线索的可测量的注意力分配的变化,或者压力可能影响动机过程而不改变明显的注意模式。另一种可能性是,我们的研究设计特有的方法限制了对注意力过程中压力相关变化的检测。需要进一步的研究来阐明注意力过程在压力相关饮食中的作用,特别是在暴饮暴食方面。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Appetite
Appetite 医学-行为科学
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
11.10%
发文量
566
审稿时长
13.4 weeks
期刊介绍: Appetite is an international research journal specializing in cultural, social, psychological, sensory and physiological influences on the selection and intake of foods and drinks. It covers normal and disordered eating and drinking and welcomes studies of both human and non-human animal behaviour toward food. Appetite publishes research reports, reviews and commentaries. Thematic special issues appear regularly. From time to time the journal carries abstracts from professional meetings. Submissions to Appetite are expected to be based primarily on observations directly related to the selection and intake of foods and drinks; papers that are primarily focused on topics such as nutrition or obesity will not be considered unless they specifically make a novel scientific contribution to the understanding of appetite in line with the journal's aims and scope.
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