Research on Eating Behavior and Obesity: Where Does it Fit in Personality and Social Psychology?
- 1 April 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
- Vol. 3 (3) , 333-355
- https://doi.org/10.1177/014616727700300303
Abstract
The study of human eating behavior provides a model for understanding the operation of a system of motivated behaviors involving the integration of physiological, sensory, cognitive, social and cultural inputs in a control system to which they are all essential. A review of current research in the area demonstrates the reciprocal relationship of these factors and indicates that eating must be examined at many different levels of analysis and with mul tiple methodologies. Work on eating and obesity suggests conceptual issues relevant to the use of the internal-external dichotomy in social psychology and has importance for research on stigmatiza tion and deviance, self perception, control and predictability, group processes, and individual differences. Research on eating behavior further demonstrates how conceptual analyses evolve in settings and for problems which were not specifically created to test theory.Keywords
This publication has 72 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stress-Induced Hyperphagia and Obesity in Rats: A Possible Model for Understanding Human ObesityScience, 1976
- Personal control over aversive stimuli and its relationship to stress.Psychological Bulletin, 1973
- Anxiety, fear and eating: A test of the psychosomatic concept of obesity.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1972
- Conditioned satiety in the rat.Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 1972
- Physiological Role of PleasureScience, 1971
- Obesity: Absence of Satiety Aversion to SucroseScience, 1970
- Section of Psychology: MINDWANDERING AND COGNITIVE STRUCTURE*, †Transactions of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1970
- Self-perception: An alternative interpretation of cognitive dissonance phenomena.Psychological Review, 1967
- Transformation of oral impulses in eating disorders: A conceptual approachPsychiatric Quarterly, 1961
- EMOTIONAL SELECTIVITY IN PERCEPTION AND REACTION*Journal of Personality, 1947