4.4 Article

Attentional bias and disengagement as a function of Body Mass Index in conditions that differ in anticipated reward

期刊

JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL ADDICTIONS
卷 9, 期 3, 页码 818-825

出版社

AKADEMIAI KIADO ZRT
DOI: 10.1556/2006.2020.00073

关键词

BMI; attentional bias; disengagement; reward; mindfulness

资金

  1. MTA-SE-NAP B Genetic Brain Imaging Migraine Research Group, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Semmelweis University [KTIA_NAP_13-2-2015-0001]
  2. Hungarian Brain Research Program [2017-1.2.1-NKP-2017-00002]
  3. Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office [FK128614]
  4. Bolyai Janos Research Fellowship of the Hungarian Academy of Science

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Background and aims: Previous studies suggest that attentional bias and disengagement may vary as a function of Body Mass Index (BMI), most notably in a palatable food related context. Though this could indeed represent a food context specific effect, it could also represent a general reward related context effect. In addition, though mindfulness and stress have both been reported to affect attention, it is not yet clear whether these moderate the relationship between BMI and attention as a function of reward context. In the current study we addressed these questions. It was hypothesized that BMI would be positively associated with bias in a food context and money context relative to a neutral context. The inverse was expected for disengagement. It was expected that mindfulness would decrease these relationships and for stress the inverse was expected. Methods: In the current online study, eighty-seven participants (24 males and 63 females; age: M = 30.1, SD = 8.3; BMI: M = 24.2, SD = 4.67), filled out questionnaires and completed a visuospatial cueing task measuring attention and disengagement of attention in a neutral, food-related, and money-related condition. Results: There was no association between BMI and attentional bias. Higher BMI was associated with faster responses to money pictures presented opposite to a cued location as compared to money pictures that did not follow a predictive cue. Our results do not support a clear moderating role of mindfulness and stress. Discussion and conclusion: Our results imply faster processing and associated quicker responding to unanticipated reward-related stimuli in individuals with overweight or obesity.

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