Counteractive Control and the Dieter: The Role of Food Cue Specificity in Food Selection and Eating Behavior

Research on counteractive control theory suggests that exposure to food cues should bolster the dieting goal in restrained individuals. However, other research has found food cues to increase eating. The present study investigates whether cue specificity influences whether counteractive control or h...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nguyen, Christine
Other Authors: Polivy, Janet
Language:en_ca
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/31366
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-31366
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-313662013-04-20T05:22:07ZCounteractive Control and the Dieter: The Role of Food Cue Specificity in Food Selection and Eating BehaviorNguyen, ChristineCounteractive ControlDietingFood Cues0451Research on counteractive control theory suggests that exposure to food cues should bolster the dieting goal in restrained individuals. However, other research has found food cues to increase eating. The present study investigates whether cue specificity influences whether counteractive control or hyper-responsiveness to food cues takes precedence in dieters’ food selection and eating behavior. Restrained eaters were assigned to view a cookie, cake, or flower cue, then they selected a snack to take (apple or cookie). Participants also had an opportunity to eat cookies. Results showed that restrained participants exposed to the cake cue chose the apple more often than those receiving any other cue; exposure to a tempting cue not specific to the snack offered elicited counteractive control. However, participants exposed to either food cue ate more cookies than those exposed to the neutral cue. The role of food cue specificity in counteractive control and its limits are examined.Polivy, Janet2011-112011-12-15T15:48:32ZNO_RESTRICTION2011-12-15T15:48:32Z2011-12-15Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/31366en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic Counteractive Control
Dieting
Food Cues
0451
spellingShingle Counteractive Control
Dieting
Food Cues
0451
Nguyen, Christine
Counteractive Control and the Dieter: The Role of Food Cue Specificity in Food Selection and Eating Behavior
description Research on counteractive control theory suggests that exposure to food cues should bolster the dieting goal in restrained individuals. However, other research has found food cues to increase eating. The present study investigates whether cue specificity influences whether counteractive control or hyper-responsiveness to food cues takes precedence in dieters’ food selection and eating behavior. Restrained eaters were assigned to view a cookie, cake, or flower cue, then they selected a snack to take (apple or cookie). Participants also had an opportunity to eat cookies. Results showed that restrained participants exposed to the cake cue chose the apple more often than those receiving any other cue; exposure to a tempting cue not specific to the snack offered elicited counteractive control. However, participants exposed to either food cue ate more cookies than those exposed to the neutral cue. The role of food cue specificity in counteractive control and its limits are examined.
author2 Polivy, Janet
author_facet Polivy, Janet
Nguyen, Christine
author Nguyen, Christine
author_sort Nguyen, Christine
title Counteractive Control and the Dieter: The Role of Food Cue Specificity in Food Selection and Eating Behavior
title_short Counteractive Control and the Dieter: The Role of Food Cue Specificity in Food Selection and Eating Behavior
title_full Counteractive Control and the Dieter: The Role of Food Cue Specificity in Food Selection and Eating Behavior
title_fullStr Counteractive Control and the Dieter: The Role of Food Cue Specificity in Food Selection and Eating Behavior
title_full_unstemmed Counteractive Control and the Dieter: The Role of Food Cue Specificity in Food Selection and Eating Behavior
title_sort counteractive control and the dieter: the role of food cue specificity in food selection and eating behavior
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/31366
work_keys_str_mv AT nguyenchristine counteractivecontrolandthedietertheroleoffoodcuespecificityinfoodselectionandeatingbehavior
_version_ 1716583621354061824