Anxiety, disgust and negative emotions influence food intake in humans

Randler C, Desch IH, Otte im Kampe V, Wüst- Ackermann P, Wilde M, Prokop P (2017)
International Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science 7: 11-15.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
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Autor*in
Randler, Christoph; Desch, Inga H; Otte im Kampe, Viola; Wüst- Ackermann, Peter; Wilde, MatthiasUniBi ; Prokop, Pavol
Abstract / Bemerkung
A growing body of research has shown that the emotion of disgust is adaptive since it protects humans from pathogens. The possible role of anxiety and other positive and negative emotions in pathogen avoidance remain less clear. We investigated individual food acceptance after a disgust-evoking experience ( a trout dissection) in a real-life setting by assessing the taking of a portion of trout. The unique contribution is that both state and trait disgust influence the likelihood of taking food after being disgusted. Participants who were more anxious, disgust sensitive or predisposed to more negative emotions avoided food after dissection significantly more frequently than their more positively affected counterparts. Males tended to accept food more often than females. Overall, these results suggest that anxiety, disgust and additional negative emotions are important in human food avoidance and that both anxiety and emotions can be considered as adaptive from an evolutionary perspective
Stichworte
anxiety; dissection; emotion; evolution; food
Erscheinungsjahr
2017
Zeitschriftentitel
International Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science
Band
7
Seite(n)
11 - 15
ISSN
1878-450X
eISSN
1878-4518
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2906850

Zitieren

Randler C, Desch IH, Otte im Kampe V, Wüst- Ackermann P, Wilde M, Prokop P. Anxiety, disgust and negative emotions influence food intake in humans. International Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science. 2017;7:11-15.
Randler, C., Desch, I. H., Otte im Kampe, V., Wüst- Ackermann, P., Wilde, M., & Prokop, P. (2017). Anxiety, disgust and negative emotions influence food intake in humans. International Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science, 7, 11-15. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijgfs.2016.11.005
Randler, Christoph, Desch, Inga H, Otte im Kampe, Viola, Wüst- Ackermann, Peter, Wilde, Matthias, and Prokop, Pavol. 2017. “Anxiety, disgust and negative emotions influence food intake in humans”. International Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science 7: 11-15.
Randler, C., Desch, I. H., Otte im Kampe, V., Wüst- Ackermann, P., Wilde, M., and Prokop, P. (2017). Anxiety, disgust and negative emotions influence food intake in humans. International Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science 7, 11-15.
Randler, C., et al., 2017. Anxiety, disgust and negative emotions influence food intake in humans. International Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science, 7, p 11-15.
C. Randler, et al., “Anxiety, disgust and negative emotions influence food intake in humans”, International Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science, vol. 7, 2017, pp. 11-15.
Randler, C., Desch, I.H., Otte im Kampe, V., Wüst- Ackermann, P., Wilde, M., Prokop, P.: Anxiety, disgust and negative emotions influence food intake in humans. International Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science. 7, 11-15 (2017).
Randler, Christoph, Desch, Inga H, Otte im Kampe, Viola, Wüst- Ackermann, Peter, Wilde, Matthias, and Prokop, Pavol. “Anxiety, disgust and negative emotions influence food intake in humans”. International Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science 7 (2017): 11-15.
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2021-06-25T07:10:47Z
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