Results 291 to 300 of about 7,366,714 (341)
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Eating behavior in binge eating disorder
International Journal of Eating Disorders, 1993In order to examine the eating behavior of individuals with the newly proposed diagnosis, binge eating disorder (BED), standardized meals were served to 20 obese women, 10 with BED and 10 without BED. When asked to binge eat from a multiple-item array of foods, obese subjects with BED consumed significantly more calories than did obese subjects without
J A, Goldfein +4 more
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Weight stigma and eating behavior: A review of the literature.
Appetite, 2016L. Vartanian, Alexis M. Porter
semanticscholar +3 more sources
Nutrition Reviews, 2009
Girls' perception of what constitutes normal body weight is often unrealistic. Many of them are preoccupied with fear of being fat. Such misconceptions can strongly influence eating behavior.
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Girls' perception of what constitutes normal body weight is often unrealistic. Many of them are preoccupied with fear of being fat. Such misconceptions can strongly influence eating behavior.
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Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1989
Despite our strong belief in the utility of laboratory studies of eating behavior, we also note several caveats on the data thereby obtained. First, it must be assumed that subjects' behavior is influenced by the laboratory environment and is not identical to eating behavior in a "normal" setting.
B T, Walsh, H R, Kissileff, C M, Hadigan
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Despite our strong belief in the utility of laboratory studies of eating behavior, we also note several caveats on the data thereby obtained. First, it must be assumed that subjects' behavior is influenced by the laboratory environment and is not identical to eating behavior in a "normal" setting.
B T, Walsh, H R, Kissileff, C M, Hadigan
openaire +2 more sources
Biological Psychology, 2018
OBJECTIVES Stress and emotions alter eating behavior in several ways: While experiencing negative or positive emotions typically leads to increased food intake, stress may result in either over- or undereating.
J. Reichenberger +6 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
OBJECTIVES Stress and emotions alter eating behavior in several ways: While experiencing negative or positive emotions typically leads to increased food intake, stress may result in either over- or undereating.
J. Reichenberger +6 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
1989
Since anorexia is a serious aberration of normal eating behavior, it is important to understand the mechanisms of animal and human eating patterns in order to reach a better understanding of the fundamental processes involved in eating. This will be done through an examination of the behavioral and learned eating patterns of animals, as well as the ...
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Since anorexia is a serious aberration of normal eating behavior, it is important to understand the mechanisms of animal and human eating patterns in order to reach a better understanding of the fundamental processes involved in eating. This will be done through an examination of the behavioral and learned eating patterns of animals, as well as the ...
openaire +1 more source
Eating behavior in eating disorders: Response to preloads
Physiology & Behavior, 1991Eating behavior in eating-disordered subjects was investigated by recording food intake and subjective ratings following three preloads differing in calories, weight and connotation. Subjects were patients with a DSM-IIIR diagnosis of anorexia nervosa or bulimia nervosa and nonpatient volunteers (normal-weight or overweight dieters, and normal-weight ...
M M, Hetherington, B J, Rolls
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How eating behavior, food stimuli and gender may affect visual attention - An eye tracking study.
Eating Behaviors, 2018The aim of the current study was to examine how different patterns of eating behavior and visual attention to different food cues are related to each other while taken gender into account.
Gerrit Hummel +4 more
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The relevance of interoception for eating behavior and eating disorders
Oxford Scholarship Online, 2018The importance of interoception for adaptive and maladaptive behavior, as well as for psychopathology, has gained growing interest, and dysfunctional interoception has been recognized as representing a core impairment across psychosomatic and psychiatric
B. Herbert, O. Pollatos
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Eating Behavior, Emotions, and Overweight
Psychological Reports, 1981Your Emotional Investment in Eating: A Test was administered to 26 subjects 20 or more pounds overweight, and to 36 subjects within 20 pounds of “desirable” weight. The test as a whole differentiated the groups as did 11 of 30 individual items. The overweight persons showed greater emotional reactivity, were more self-dissatisfied, more private or ...
A, Hudson, S G, Williams
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