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 heal...
People who are obese and want to lose weight without surgery deserve the best treatment that we can ...
People who are obese and want to lose weight without surgery deserve the best treatment that we can ...
Introduction: There is mixed evidence regarding the association between eating disorders (EDs) and a...
Abstract Background Both obesity and eating disorders...
Recent models of obesity and eating behaviour have implicated both automatic responding to food-rela...
Grazing is a common, detrimental eating behaviour in bariatric surgery settings. Little is known abo...
Background: Despite being the first validated measure of grazing, the Grazing Questionnaire (GQ) has...
Purpose: The current study aimed to investigate associations between grazing and different facets of...
Grazing, the unstructured, repetitive eating of small amounts of food, is a pattern of eating which ...
Grazing, including a compulsive subtype, represents an eating behaviour of recent interest in obesit...
Abstract Background Grazing, the repetitious and unplanned eating of small amounts of food with or w...
Background: Grazing, the repetitious and unplanned eating of small amounts of food with or without a...
People who are obese and want to lose weight without surgery deserve the best treatment that we can ...
Contemporary research investigating obesity has focused on grazing (i.e. an uncontrolled and repetit...
People who are obese and want to lose weight without surgery deserve the best treatment that we can ...
People who are obese and want to lose weight without surgery deserve the best treatment that we can ...
People who are obese and want to lose weight without surgery deserve the best treatment that we can ...
Introduction: There is mixed evidence regarding the association between eating disorders (EDs) and a...
Abstract Background Both obesity and eating disorders...
Recent models of obesity and eating behaviour have implicated both automatic responding to food-rela...
Grazing is a common, detrimental eating behaviour in bariatric surgery settings. Little is known abo...
Background: Despite being the first validated measure of grazing, the Grazing Questionnaire (GQ) has...
Purpose: The current study aimed to investigate associations between grazing and different facets of...
Grazing, the unstructured, repetitive eating of small amounts of food, is a pattern of eating which ...
Grazing, including a compulsive subtype, represents an eating behaviour of recent interest in obesit...
Abstract Background Grazing, the repetitious and unplanned eating of small amounts of food with or w...
Background: Grazing, the repetitious and unplanned eating of small amounts of food with or without a...
People who are obese and want to lose weight without surgery deserve the best treatment that we can ...
Contemporary research investigating obesity has focused on grazing (i.e. an uncontrolled and repetit...
People who are obese and want to lose weight without surgery deserve the best treatment that we can ...
People who are obese and want to lose weight without surgery deserve the best treatment that we can ...
People who are obese and want to lose weight without surgery deserve the best treatment that we can ...
Introduction: There is mixed evidence regarding the association between eating disorders (EDs) and a...