This study examined the effect of anticipated food deprivation on intake in restrained and unrestrained eaters. Participants were randomly assigned to a diet condition, in which they expected to diet for a week, or to a control (no-diet) condition. Immediately after being assigned to a condition, participants completed a taste-rating task in which food consumption was measured. Restrained eaters in the diet condition consumed significantly more food than did restrained eaters in the no-diet condition or unrestrained eaters in either condition. Unrestrained eaters consumed the same amount regardless of condition. These results confirm that merely planning to go on a diet can trigger overeating in restrained eaters, reflecting the dynamic con...
Dietary restraint is defined as a tendency to consciously restrict or control food intake. When rest...
ObjectivesThis study utilised the preload paradigm to evaluate whether trait-like dieting attitudes ...
The present study investigates whether the so-called disinhibition effect is better accounted for by...
grantor: University of TorontoThree studies were conducted to examine the response of rest...
grantor: University of TorontoThree studies were conducted to examine the response of rest...
Four studies were conducted to examine whether disinhibited eating among restrained eaters can be di...
Four studies were conducted to examine whether disinhibited eating among restrained eaters can be di...
The eating behavior of chronic dieters (restrained eaters) and nondieters (unrestrained eaters) is e...
The eating behavior of chronic dieters (restrained eaters) and nondieters (unrestrained eaters) is e...
A robust finding in eating research is the so-called counterregulation in restrained eaters. This me...
Restraint refers to a chronic, deliberate concern about limiting food consumption. The present resea...
A robust finding in eating research is the so-called counterregulation in restrained eaters. This me...
peer reviewedOBJECTIVE: While restrained eating is one of the most well-established risk factors of ...
Understanding the triggers of eating in everyday life is crucial for the creation of interventions t...
Past research has shown that strong emotional or motivational states can cause normally restrained e...
Dietary restraint is defined as a tendency to consciously restrict or control food intake. When rest...
ObjectivesThis study utilised the preload paradigm to evaluate whether trait-like dieting attitudes ...
The present study investigates whether the so-called disinhibition effect is better accounted for by...
grantor: University of TorontoThree studies were conducted to examine the response of rest...
grantor: University of TorontoThree studies were conducted to examine the response of rest...
Four studies were conducted to examine whether disinhibited eating among restrained eaters can be di...
Four studies were conducted to examine whether disinhibited eating among restrained eaters can be di...
The eating behavior of chronic dieters (restrained eaters) and nondieters (unrestrained eaters) is e...
The eating behavior of chronic dieters (restrained eaters) and nondieters (unrestrained eaters) is e...
A robust finding in eating research is the so-called counterregulation in restrained eaters. This me...
Restraint refers to a chronic, deliberate concern about limiting food consumption. The present resea...
A robust finding in eating research is the so-called counterregulation in restrained eaters. This me...
peer reviewedOBJECTIVE: While restrained eating is one of the most well-established risk factors of ...
Understanding the triggers of eating in everyday life is crucial for the creation of interventions t...
Past research has shown that strong emotional or motivational states can cause normally restrained e...
Dietary restraint is defined as a tendency to consciously restrict or control food intake. When rest...
ObjectivesThis study utilised the preload paradigm to evaluate whether trait-like dieting attitudes ...
The present study investigates whether the so-called disinhibition effect is better accounted for by...