Skip to main content

A Laboratory-Based Study of the Priming Effects of Food Cues and Stress on Hunger and Food Intake in Individuals with Obesity.

Citation
Chao, Ariana M, et al. “A Laboratory-Based Study of the Priming Effects of Food Cues and Stress on Hunger and Food Intake in Individuals With Obesity”. 2020. Obesity (Silver Spring, Md.), vol. 28, no. 11, 2020, pp. 2090–2097.
Center Yale University
Author Ariana M Chao, Nia Fogelman, Rachel Hart, Carlos M Grilo, Rajita Sinha
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to assess the effects of exposures to food cues and stress on hunger and food intake and examine whether cue responses differ by weight status.

METHODS: In a laboratory-based experimental study, participants (n = 138) were exposed to stress, neutral, and food cues delivered using an individualized script-driven imagery task on three separate days. After each cue exposure, participants ate high- and low-calorie snack foods ad libitum (Food Snack Test). Hunger was measured by visual analog scales.

RESULTS: Food cues elicited significantly greater increases in hunger compared with neutral and stress stimuli. Cue-induced hunger did not differ by weight status. Participants consumed a similar number of total calories across stimuli. In response to food cue provocation, participants with obesity consumed [mean (SE)] 81.0% (4.0%) of calories from high-calorie foods, which was significantly greater than participants with normal weight (63.5%  [3.6%]; P = 0.001). After the stress cue, participants with obesity consumed 81.4% (4.0%) of calories from high-calorie foods, which was significantly more than participants with normal weight (70.2% [3.6%]; P = 0.04). Energy intake from high-calorie foods did not differ by weight status after the neutral cue.

CONCLUSIONS: Among individuals with obesity, exposure to food and stress cues shifted consumption to high-calorie snack foods within a well-controlled experimental setting.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Obesity (Silver Spring, Md.)
Volume
28
Issue
11
Number of Pages
2090-2097
Date Published
11/2020
ISSN Number
1930-739X
DOI
10.1002/oby.22952
Alternate Journal
Obesity (Silver Spring)
PMID
32918391
PMCID
PMC7644599
Download citation