The bright side of stress induced eating : eating more when stressed but less when pleased

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EATMOTIVE Innovationen für den Ernährungssektor: Warum wir essen, was wir essen: Motive, sozialer Kontext und ökonomische Implikationen.
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Psychological Science. 2014, 25(1), pp. 58-65. ISSN 0956-7976. eISSN 1467-9280. Available under: doi: 10.1177/0956797613494849
Zusammenfassung

Previous research suggests that approximately 40% to 50% of the population increase food consumption under stressful conditions. The prevailing view is that eating in response to stress is a type of maladaptive self-regulation. Past research has concentrated mainly on the negative effects of social stress on eating. We propose that positive social experiences may also modulate eating behavior. In the present study, participants were assigned to social-exclusion, neutral, and social-inclusion conditions. In a subsequent bogus taste test, the amount of ice cream eaten and habitual stress-related eating were measured. After being socially excluded, people who habitually eat more in response to stress (stress hyperphagics) ate significantly more than people who habitually eat less in response to stress (stress hypophagics). Conversely, after being socially included, stress hyperphagics ate significantly less than stress hypophagics. The present findings provide the first evidence for complementary adjustments of food consumption across positive and negative situations. Implications of these findings for the relationship of stress and body weight are discussed.

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150 Psychologie
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ISO 690SPROESSER, Gudrun, Harald T. SCHUPP, Britta RENNER, 2014. The bright side of stress induced eating : eating more when stressed but less when pleased. In: Psychological Science. 2014, 25(1), pp. 58-65. ISSN 0956-7976. eISSN 1467-9280. Available under: doi: 10.1177/0956797613494849
BibTex
@article{Sproesser2014-01brigh-25009,
  year={2014},
  doi={10.1177/0956797613494849},
  title={The bright side of stress induced eating : eating more when stressed but less when pleased},
  number={1},
  volume={25},
  issn={0956-7976},
  journal={Psychological Science},
  pages={58--65},
  author={Sproesser, Gudrun and Schupp, Harald T. and Renner, Britta}
}
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