4.5 Article

Computational mechanisms underpinning greater exploratory behaviour in excess weight relative to healthy weight adolescents

Journal

APPETITE
Volume 183, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.appet.2023.106484

Keywords

Explore; exploit; Computational modelling; Adolescent obesity; Decision-making; Addictive eating

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Obesity in adolescence is associated with a preference for exploratory behaviors, independent of sensitivity to reward. This study found that adolescents with excess weight displayed more exploratory behavior and switching behavior than their healthy-weight counterparts. However, there was no difference in reinforcement sensitivity between the two groups. This pattern may underlie the intrinsic desire to explore energy-dense unhealthy foods and could be targeted in future treatments of obesity in adolescents.
Obesity in adolescence is associated with cognitive changes that lead to difficulties in shifting unhealthy habits in favour of alternative healthy behaviours, similar to addictive behaviours. An outstanding question is whether this shift in goal-directed behaviour is driven by over-exploitation or over-exploration of rewarding outcomes. Here, we addressed this question by comparing explore/exploit behaviour on the Iowa Gambling Task in 43 adoles-cents with excess weight against 38 adolescents with healthy weight. We computationally modelled both exploitation behaviour (e.g., reinforcement sensitivity and inverse decay parameters), and explorative behaviour (e.g., maximum directed exploration value). We found that overall, adolescents with excess weight displayed more behavioural exploration than their healthy-weight counterparts - specifically, demonstrating greater overall switching behaviour. Computational models revealed that this behaviour was driven by a higher maximum directed exploration value in the excess-weight group (U = 520.00, p = .005, BF10 = 5.11). Impor-tantly, however, we found substantial evidence that groups did not differ in reinforcement sensitivity (U = 867.00, p = .641, BF10 = 0.30). Overall, our study demonstrates a preference for exploratory behaviour in ad-olescents with excess weight, independent of sensitivity to reward. This pattern could potentially underpin an intrinsic desire to explore energy-dense unhealthy foods - an as-yet untapped mechanism that could be targeted in future treatments of obesity in adolescents.

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