Preliminary support for the role of alcohol cues in food cravings and attentional biases
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Date
2017
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English
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Abstract
This study examined whether alcohol odors, in isolation or when combined with pictures, would influence food attentional biases and cravings. Participants’ cravings and attentional biases to food and alcohol pictures were assessed after exposure to alcohol or water odors (n = 77; mean age = 30.84 years, 51.9% female, 83.1% Caucasian). Food attentional biases were increased by alcohol odors, but food cravings were increased only by a combination of alcohol odors and food pictures. These effects were related with self-reported problematic food consumption. These findings support a research program for further examining the effect of alcohol cues on problematic food consumption.
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Karyadi, K. A., & Cyders, M. A. (2017). Preliminary support for the role of alcohol cues in food cravings and attentional biases. Journal of Health Psychology, 1359105316685898. https://doi.org/10.1177/1359105316685898
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Journal of Health Psychology
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