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Original Articles

Emotional eating and Pavlovian learning: evidence for conditioned appetitive responding to negative emotional states

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Pages 284-297 | Received 28 May 2015, Accepted 12 Oct 2015, Published online: 05 Nov 2015
 

ABSTRACT

Appetitive learning has been demonstrated several times using neutral cues or contexts as a predictor of food intake and it has been shown that humans easily learn cued desires for foods. It has, however, never been studied whether internal cues are also capable of appetitive conditioning. In this study, we tested whether humans can learn cued eating desires to negative moods as conditioned stimuli (CS), thereby offering a potential explanation of emotional eating (EE). Female participants were randomly presented with 10 different stimuli eliciting either negative or neutral emotional states, with one of these states paired with eating chocolate. Expectancy to eat, desire to eat, salivation, and unpleasantness of experiencing negative emotions were assessed. After conditioning, participants were brought into a negative emotional state and were asked to choose between money and chocolate. Data showed differential conditioned responding on the expectancy and desire measures, but not on salivation. Specific conditioned effects were obtained for participants with a higher BMI (body mass index) on the choice task, and for participants high on EE on the unpleasantness ratings. These findings provide the first experimental evidence for the idea that negative emotions can act as conditioned stimuli, and might suggest that classical conditioning is involved in EE.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1. IAPS pictures used for the negative version were 2053, 2141, 2205, 2800, 2900, 3230, 3350, 6570, 6838, 9000, 9041, 9050, 9415, 9421, 9520, 9530, 9611, 9910. IAPS pictures used for the neutral version were 1670, 2191, 2393, 2410, 2487, 2514, 2518, 5390, 5395, 5520, 7002, 7004, 7039, 7041, 7090, 7150, 8211, 8311.

2. See note 1 above.

Additional information

Funding

This study is part of an ongoing project that is financed by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research [Vici Grant 453.10.006] awarded to Anita Jansen.

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