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Pavlovian conditioning to food reward as a function of eating disorder risk

Authors :
Andrew W. Carew
Robert S. Astur
Alexandra N. Palmisano
Rachel N. Niezrecki
Franchesca S. Kuhney
Melissa Santos
Bonnie E. Deaton
Ellie C. Hudd
Source :
Behavioural Brain Research. 291:277-282
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2015.

Abstract

The aim of this experiment was to examine the extent to which eating disorder risk affects the strength of food-reward conditioning. Eighty food-restricted undergraduates were placed into a VR environment consisting of two visually distinct rooms. Participants underwent multiple pairing sessions in which they were confined into one of the two rooms and explored a VR environment. Room A was paired with real-life MMs for three sessions, and Room B was paired with no food for three sessions. After a short delay, a test session was administered, and participants were given free access to the entire VR environment for 5 min. Participants also completed the Eating Attitudes Test (EAT-26; [11]), which is a standard screening tool of eating disorder risk. Participants displayed a significant conditioned place preference for the VR room previously paired with food, and they displayed a significant explicit preference for the MM-paired room in a forced-choice test. There was a significant positive correlation between place preference strength and scores on the dieting subscale of the EAT-26. Additionally, ratings of the no-food room were significantly lower as dieting scores increased. This suggests that components of eating disorder risk can influence basic conditioning strength to places associated with food reward. For both males and females, additional correlations between eating disorder risk subscales and conditioning variables are discussed, and implications for future research are proposed in hopes of understanding how conditioning paradigms can provide insight into treating and preventing eating disorders.

Details

ISSN :
01664328
Volume :
291
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Behavioural Brain Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....765648ccb740f3d7fd54410d9ba8cee9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbr.2015.05.016