An exploration of the implicit food attitudes of people with Type-1 Diabetes using reaction-time and electrophysiological measures

People with type-1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) have to be aware of their dietary intake for health reasons and this study aims to investigate whether their food attitudes are different from non diabetic controls. Adult participants with T1DM (n = 12) and non diabetic controls (n = 12) were recruited to...

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Main Author: Huggins, Michele
Published: University of Birmingham 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.541531
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5415312019-04-03T06:45:28ZAn exploration of the implicit food attitudes of people with Type-1 Diabetes using reaction-time and electrophysiological measuresHuggins, Michele2011People with type-1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) have to be aware of their dietary intake for health reasons and this study aims to investigate whether their food attitudes are different from non diabetic controls. Adult participants with T1DM (n = 12) and non diabetic controls (n = 12) were recruited to this affective priming study on food attitudes. Participants were exposed to picture primes from 3 food categories (high-fat sweet, high-fat savoury and low-fat) and to pictures of non-food items (i.e. chair, ball). Brain activity was recorded during the affective priming task using EEG to explore electrophysiological differences between the groups. The results found positive implicit and explicit attitudes towards all food-types with no group differences. The EEG data focussed on N200, P300 and LPP ERP’s and group differences were observed for the N200 ERP. The T1DM group demonstrated a larger N200 than the control group in all food and non-food conditions suggesting that there are electro cortical differences in brain functioning between these two groups and reasons for this difference are presented.610.7343BF PsychologyUniversity of Birminghamhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.541531http://etheses.bham.ac.uk//id/eprint/2880/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 610.7343
BF Psychology
spellingShingle 610.7343
BF Psychology
Huggins, Michele
An exploration of the implicit food attitudes of people with Type-1 Diabetes using reaction-time and electrophysiological measures
description People with type-1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) have to be aware of their dietary intake for health reasons and this study aims to investigate whether their food attitudes are different from non diabetic controls. Adult participants with T1DM (n = 12) and non diabetic controls (n = 12) were recruited to this affective priming study on food attitudes. Participants were exposed to picture primes from 3 food categories (high-fat sweet, high-fat savoury and low-fat) and to pictures of non-food items (i.e. chair, ball). Brain activity was recorded during the affective priming task using EEG to explore electrophysiological differences between the groups. The results found positive implicit and explicit attitudes towards all food-types with no group differences. The EEG data focussed on N200, P300 and LPP ERP’s and group differences were observed for the N200 ERP. The T1DM group demonstrated a larger N200 than the control group in all food and non-food conditions suggesting that there are electro cortical differences in brain functioning between these two groups and reasons for this difference are presented.
author Huggins, Michele
author_facet Huggins, Michele
author_sort Huggins, Michele
title An exploration of the implicit food attitudes of people with Type-1 Diabetes using reaction-time and electrophysiological measures
title_short An exploration of the implicit food attitudes of people with Type-1 Diabetes using reaction-time and electrophysiological measures
title_full An exploration of the implicit food attitudes of people with Type-1 Diabetes using reaction-time and electrophysiological measures
title_fullStr An exploration of the implicit food attitudes of people with Type-1 Diabetes using reaction-time and electrophysiological measures
title_full_unstemmed An exploration of the implicit food attitudes of people with Type-1 Diabetes using reaction-time and electrophysiological measures
title_sort exploration of the implicit food attitudes of people with type-1 diabetes using reaction-time and electrophysiological measures
publisher University of Birmingham
publishDate 2011
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.541531
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