Relating goal-directed behaviour to grazing in persons with obesity with and without eating disorder features

Abstract Background Both obesity and eating disorders (ED) have been associated with reductions in purposeful, flexible goal-directed behaviour, and with an overreliance on more rigid habitual behaviour. It is currently unknown whether grazing, an eating style which is common in both conditions, is...

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Main Authors: Andreea I. Heriseanu, Phillipa Hay, Laura Corbit, Stephen Touyz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-10-01
Series:Journal of Eating Disorders
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40337-020-00324-1
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spelling doaj-d20ed18b67c7477bb7123100ce11f4122020-11-25T03:16:20ZengBMCJournal of Eating Disorders2050-29742020-10-018111410.1186/s40337-020-00324-1Relating goal-directed behaviour to grazing in persons with obesity with and without eating disorder featuresAndreea I. Heriseanu0Phillipa Hay1Laura Corbit2Stephen Touyz3Clinical Psychology Unit, School of Psychology, University of SydneyTranslational Health Research Institute, School of Medicine, Western Sydney UniversityDepartment of Psychology, University of TorontoClinical Psychology Unit, School of Psychology, University of SydneyAbstract Background Both obesity and eating disorders (ED) have been associated with reductions in purposeful, flexible goal-directed behaviour, and with an overreliance on more rigid habitual behaviour. It is currently unknown whether grazing, an eating style which is common in both conditions, is related to goal-directed behaviour. The current study therefore aimed to relate grazing to goal-directed behaviour in a group of participants with obesity with and without ED features, compared to a healthy-weight control group. Methods Participants (N = 87; 67.8% women, mean age 28.57 years), of whom 19 had obesity and significant eating disorder features, 25 had obesity but without marked eating disorder features, and 43 were age- and sex-matched healthy-weight controls, completed two instrumental learning tasks assessing action-outcome contingency sensitivity and devaluation sensitivity, as well as demographic and eating disorder-related questionnaires. Gamma and Ordinary Least Squares regressions were performed to examine the effect of group and grazing on goal-directed behaviour. Results Lower action-outcome contingency sensitivity was found in the group with obesity and with eating disorder features than in the group with obesity but without eating disorder features or in healthy controls. No group differences in devaluation sensitivity were found. A small but significant relationship was found between grazing severity and contingency sensitivity in the group with obesity and eating disorder features, such that increasing grazing severity was associated with less diminished contingency sensitivity. Conclusions There is some indication that in persons with obesity and eating disorder features instrumental behaviour is less flexible and adaptive; furthermore, within this group grazing may represent a goal-directed behaviour, despite unhelpful long-term implications of grazing.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40337-020-00324-1GrazingObesityEating disordersGoal-directed behaviourHabitCompulsive eating
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andreea I. Heriseanu
Phillipa Hay
Laura Corbit
Stephen Touyz
spellingShingle Andreea I. Heriseanu
Phillipa Hay
Laura Corbit
Stephen Touyz
Relating goal-directed behaviour to grazing in persons with obesity with and without eating disorder features
Journal of Eating Disorders
Grazing
Obesity
Eating disorders
Goal-directed behaviour
Habit
Compulsive eating
author_facet Andreea I. Heriseanu
Phillipa Hay
Laura Corbit
Stephen Touyz
author_sort Andreea I. Heriseanu
title Relating goal-directed behaviour to grazing in persons with obesity with and without eating disorder features
title_short Relating goal-directed behaviour to grazing in persons with obesity with and without eating disorder features
title_full Relating goal-directed behaviour to grazing in persons with obesity with and without eating disorder features
title_fullStr Relating goal-directed behaviour to grazing in persons with obesity with and without eating disorder features
title_full_unstemmed Relating goal-directed behaviour to grazing in persons with obesity with and without eating disorder features
title_sort relating goal-directed behaviour to grazing in persons with obesity with and without eating disorder features
publisher BMC
series Journal of Eating Disorders
issn 2050-2974
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Background Both obesity and eating disorders (ED) have been associated with reductions in purposeful, flexible goal-directed behaviour, and with an overreliance on more rigid habitual behaviour. It is currently unknown whether grazing, an eating style which is common in both conditions, is related to goal-directed behaviour. The current study therefore aimed to relate grazing to goal-directed behaviour in a group of participants with obesity with and without ED features, compared to a healthy-weight control group. Methods Participants (N = 87; 67.8% women, mean age 28.57 years), of whom 19 had obesity and significant eating disorder features, 25 had obesity but without marked eating disorder features, and 43 were age- and sex-matched healthy-weight controls, completed two instrumental learning tasks assessing action-outcome contingency sensitivity and devaluation sensitivity, as well as demographic and eating disorder-related questionnaires. Gamma and Ordinary Least Squares regressions were performed to examine the effect of group and grazing on goal-directed behaviour. Results Lower action-outcome contingency sensitivity was found in the group with obesity and with eating disorder features than in the group with obesity but without eating disorder features or in healthy controls. No group differences in devaluation sensitivity were found. A small but significant relationship was found between grazing severity and contingency sensitivity in the group with obesity and eating disorder features, such that increasing grazing severity was associated with less diminished contingency sensitivity. Conclusions There is some indication that in persons with obesity and eating disorder features instrumental behaviour is less flexible and adaptive; furthermore, within this group grazing may represent a goal-directed behaviour, despite unhelpful long-term implications of grazing.
topic Grazing
Obesity
Eating disorders
Goal-directed behaviour
Habit
Compulsive eating
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40337-020-00324-1
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