从(短暂的)缓解-学习角度解释压力诱发的暴食行为。

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q2 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Silvia Papalini
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引用次数: 0

摘要

人们用各种行为来应对压力事件。这些行为大多是适应性的,因为它们既能成功释放压力,又不会影响生活的其他方面:在忙碌的工作日吃几勺最爱的冰淇淋,休息一下多好?然而,当过量食用高糖/高盐的超加工食品成为缓解压力的途径时,进食就失去了这种适应功能,并可能升级为暴饮暴食,导致肥胖和其他与超重有关的病症。有几种病因学模型试图解释压力引起的进食和过度暴饮暴食行为,它们是这些临床症状的特征。流行的 "情绪进食理论"(Emotional Eating Theory)认为,与压力相关的(过度)进食是肥胖症和已确诊的暴饮暴食症的主要预测因素,它是在负强化学习的基础上发展起来的,因为食物消费会调节与压力环境相关的负面情绪状态。与此不同的是,著名的 "奖励敏感化理论"(Incentive Sensitization Theory)从奖励 "欲望 "的过度放大角度解释了暴饮暴食、暴食症(包括贪食症)和肥胖症,认为这是由过度暴露于致肥的(食物)线索引起的。以这些理论为导向的多项研究为更好地理解与压力相关的(过度)进食及其临床症状铺平了道路。然而,对于应激诱发的(过度)进食如何以及为何会升级直至临床形式的暴饮暴食,仍然没有深入的机理认识。将情绪化进食理论和激励敏感化理论提出的机制联系起来,可能会解决这个病因学上的未决问题。然而,为了避免错误的论点,首先必须解决每种理论和相关研究在理论和方法上的缺陷。这些缺陷源于概念上的谬误和设计上的拙劣,这可能部分解释了实证研究结果的 "高变异性和低可复制性 "问题。接下来,建立一个新的综合模型可以为深入学习和生物机制的升级提供新的视角。由于过度暴饮暴食是一种一旦形成就很难改变的行为,因此成功地将这一模型正规化可以在临床和预防研究中产生急需的影响。在这篇论文中,我建议将我们最近从安全学习领域收集到的关于缓解作用的见解应用于压力(过度)饮食。我将提出一个以缓解为基础的新模型,作为一个起点,该模型有可能将情绪进食理论与激励敏感化理论联系起来,为更多的综合科学奠定基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Stress-induced overeating behaviors explained from a (transitory) relief-learning perspective
People use various behaviors to cope with stressful events. These behaviors are mostly adaptive, as they allow a successful release of stress without impacting other aspects of life: How nice is it to have a break with a few spoons of that favorite ice cream during a hectic working day? However, when excessive consumption of high-sugar/salt ultra-processed food becomes the gateway to find relief from stress, eating loses this adaptive function and may escalate to binge eating, lead to obesity, and other medical conditions linked to overweight.
Several etiological models attempt to explain stress-induced eating and excessive overeating behaviors characterizing these clinical conditions. The popular Emotional Eating Theory proposes that stress-related (over-)eating, a major predictor of obesity and diagnosed binge eating disorders, develops based on negative reinforcement learning since food consumption regulates the negative affective state associated with stressful circumstances. Differently, the prominent Incentive Sensitization Theory explains overeating, binge eating disorders (including bulimia), and obesity in terms of excessive amplification of reward ‘wanting’, which is thought to emerge from overexposure to obesogenic (food)cues. The several studies oriented by these theories have paved the way to better understand stress-related (over-)eating and its clinical excesses. However, a deep mechanistic understanding of how and why stress-induced (over-)eating can escalate till clinical forms of overeating remain elusive. A well-funded connection of the mechanisms proposed by the Emotional Eating Theory and the Incentive Sensitization Theory might address this etiological open question. To avoid erroneous arguments, it is however essential to first address the internal theoretical and methodological shortcomings of each theory and connected studies. These shortcomings stem from conceptual fallacies and poorly implemented designs, which might partially explain the ‘high variability and low replicability’ problem of empirical findings. Next, the formulation of a new integrative model could provide fresh insight into the deep learning and biological mechanisms of this escalation. A successful formalization of this model could then create the much-needed impact in clinical and preventive research since excessive overeating is a behavior hard to change once established.
In this opinion paper, I propose to apply recent insights we gathered on the role of relief from the field of safety learning to stress (over-)eating. I will present a new relief-based model that, as a starting point, has the potential to connect the Emotional Eating Theory with the Incentive Sensitization Theory, setting the base for more integrative science.
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来源期刊
Physiology & Behavior
Physiology & Behavior 医学-行为科学
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
3.40%
发文量
274
审稿时长
47 days
期刊介绍: Physiology & Behavior is aimed at the causal physiological mechanisms of behavior and its modulation by environmental factors. The journal invites original reports in the broad area of behavioral and cognitive neuroscience, in which at least one variable is physiological and the primary emphasis and theoretical context are behavioral. The range of subjects includes behavioral neuroendocrinology, psychoneuroimmunology, learning and memory, ingestion, social behavior, and studies related to the mechanisms of psychopathology. Contemporary reviews and theoretical articles are welcomed and the Editors invite such proposals from interested authors.
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