4.5 Article

Exploring acute and non-specific effects of mobile app-based response inhibition training on food evaluation and intake

Journal

APPETITE
Volume 178, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.appet.2022.106181

Keywords

Response inhibition; Liking and wanting; Mobile application; Incentive salience; Food Preference; Energy Intake

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This study found no significant effects of response inhibition training on liking, wanting, and consumption of energy-dense foods. The duration of training did not moderate the intervention effects. Higher BMI was associated with differences in chocolate intake and frequency of choice for energy-dense foods.
Previous studies have demonstrated that response inhibition training can modify the appeal of palatable and energy-dense foods, thus serving as a potential intervention for weight management, via changes in food se-lection and intake. However, empirical findings of efficacy have been inconsistent across studies due to heter-ogenous approaches to measuring salient appetitive outcomes, training implementation strategies, and sample recruitment. Systematic assessment of both affective and motivational components of food reward may help characterise to what extent devaluation can be generalised to nutritionally similar foods post-training. In this mixed factorial experiment, a non-clinical, adult sample completed time-matched single sessions with mobile app-based response inhibition training and control tasks of short (12 min; n = 27) or long (20 min; n = 25) duration. Participants were assessed on two discrete facets of food reward pre-and post-training: pleasure (i.e., explicit liking) and desire (i.e., implicit wanting) for non-specific (i.e., novel) food stimuli differing in energy -density. Consumption of snacks categorised by energy density was also assessed in a laboratory ad libitum taste test post-training. No significant differences were found between intervention and control sessions on explicit liking or implicit wanting for non-specific energy-dense foods. Moreover, participants ate a similar volume of snack foods during both sessions. Training duration did not significantly moderate differences between intervention and control sessions in primary outcomes. Variance between intervention and control sessions in chocolate intake and frequency of choice for energy-dense foods, but not explicit liking, was associated with a higher BMI. Methodological and theoretical implications for appropriate intervention implementation and un-derlying mechanisms, respectively, are discussed.

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