Discrepancy between implicit and explicit preferences for food portions in obesity

被引:7
|
作者
Cserjesi, R. [1 ]
De Vos, I. [2 ]
Deroost, N. [2 ]
机构
[1] Eotvos Lorand Univ, Inst Psychol, ELTE, Dept Affect Psychol, Izabella St 46, H-1064 Budapest, Hungary
[2] Vrije Univ Brussel, Dept Clin Expt Psychol, Brussels, Belgium
关键词
SIZE;
D O I
10.1038/ijo.2016.91
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
We investigated the implicit preference in terms of food portion in obesity using the affective priming paradigm. Primes representing different portions of fast food (small, medium and large) were used to assess participants' readiness to respond to a positive or negative target word. A self-reported affective rating scale of food portion and a portion judgment task were administered to determine the explicit preference for food portion and portion misperception, respectively. The results of the affective priming paradigm showed an implicit preference for large food portions in the obese group. No implicit preference in terms of food portion was found in the non-obese group. The explicit preference measure of food portion demonstrated a rather negative attitude for large portions in the obese group, whereas the non-obese group reported no explicit preference in terms of food portion. Thus, unlike the non-obese group, the obese group showed clear discrepancies between implicit and explicit preferences in terms of food portion: obese participants demonstrated an implicit, but not an explicit preference for large food portions. These results could not be attributed to a misperception of food portion, as revealed by the portion judgment task. The current findings suggest that social desirability might conceal self-reported preference in terms of food portion and/or that obese individuals are less aware of their internal preferences.
引用
收藏
页码:1464 / 1467
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Translating Between Implicit and Explicit Versions of Proof
    Blanco, Roberto
    Chihani, Zakaria
    Miller, Dale
    AUTOMATED DEDUCTION - CADE 26, 2017, 10395 : 255 - 273
  • [42] Food hedonics and human appetite: Explicit and implicit measurement of liking and wanting for food
    Finlayson, G.
    PSYCHOLOGY & HEALTH, 2009, 24 : 53 - 53
  • [43] Implicit and explicit safety evaluation of foods: The importance of food processing
    Coricelli, C.
    Rumiati, R. I.
    Rioux, C.
    APPETITE, 2022, 175
  • [44] Response inhibition training and measures of explicit and implicit food valuation
    Tzavella, Loukia
    Chambers, Christopher D.
    CURRENT OPINION IN BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES, 2022, 48
  • [45] Heritable variation in food preferences and their contribution to obesity
    Reed, DR
    Bachmanov, AA
    Beauchamp, GK
    Tordoff, MG
    Price, RA
    BEHAVIOR GENETICS, 1997, 27 (04) : 373 - 387
  • [46] Heritable Variation in Food Preferences and Their Contribution to Obesity
    Danielle R. Reed
    Alexander A. Bachmanov
    Gary K. Beauchamp
    Michael G. Tordoff
    R. Arlen Price
    Behavior Genetics, 1997, 27 : 373 - 387
  • [47] Implicit and explicit attitudes toward high-fat foods in obesity
    Roefs, A
    Jansen, A
    JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2002, 111 (03) : 517 - 521
  • [48] To IMPRES or to EXPRES? Exploiting comparative judgments to measure and visualize implicit and explicit preferences
    Everaert, Tom
    Spruyt, Adriaan
    De Houwer, Jan
    PLOS ONE, 2018, 13 (01):
  • [49] An Adaptive Match-Making System reflecting the explicit and implicit preferences of users
    Park, Yoon-Joo
    EXPERT SYSTEMS WITH APPLICATIONS, 2013, 40 (04) : 1196 - 1204
  • [50] Irinan EFL Teachers' Preferences For Corrective Feedback Types, implicit Vs Explicit
    Motlagh, Leily Nekuruh
    PROCEEDINGS OF 2ND GLOBAL CONFERENCE ON CONFERENCE ON LINGUISTICS AND FOREIGN LANGUAGE TEACHING, 2015, 192 : 364 - 370