Eating habits and appetite control: a psychobiological perspective
Open Access
- 1 February 1999
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Proceedings of the Nutrition Society
- Vol. 58 (1) , 59-67
- https://doi.org/10.1079/pns19990009
Abstract
An individual's eating behaviour is shaped by factors ranging from economic conditions and cultural practices to biological influences. The physiological system controlling appetite appears to be adapted to solving the problem of an unevenness of food supply across time, and is fairly permissive in its response to undereating and overeating. Consequently, when food is abundant, the diet is energy dense and energy expenditure is low, there is a strong tendency to become obese (i.e. obesity is better viewed as due to a ‘toxic’ environment than to faulty physiological control of appetite). Under such conditions the most common method of avoiding obesity is through the cognitive control of eating. However, dietary restraint and dieting are demanding tasks, and are associated with psychological costs, including significant impairment of cognitive performance. Restraint is also prone to disinhibition, with the result that it can sometimes undermine eating control, even leading to the development of highly disordered eating patterns. In part, these difficulties are due to the self-perpetuating nature of dietary habits: for example, hunger tends to be diminished during strict unbroken dieting, but increased in individuals having a highly variable eating pattern (such as occurs when eating is frequently disinhibited). These features of appetite control provide both barriers and opportunities for changing behaviour. Accordingly, there is a need for future research to focus on the psycho-social factors and the dieting practices predicting successful eating and weight control, with the objective of identifying the actual cognitive and behavioural strategies used by the many dieters and restrained eaters who are able to achieve weight loss and maintain long-term weight stability.Keywords
This publication has 67 references indexed in Scilit:
- What Did Our Ancestors Eat?Nutrition Reviews, 2009
- Lack of effect of short-term fasting on cognitive functionJournal of Psychiatric Research, 1995
- Obesity and diabetes in “the land of milk and honey”Diabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviews, 1992
- Plasma concentrations of tryptophan and dieting.BMJ, 1990
- The relative success of official and informal weight reduction techniques: Retrospective correlational evidencePsychology & Health, 1989
- Taste-to-postingestive consequence conditioning: Is the rise in sham feeding with repeated experience a learning phenomenon?Physiology & Behavior, 1989
- The (mis)measurement of restraint: An analysis of conceptual and psychometric issues.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1988
- Sensory versus dietary factors in cafeteria-induced overweightPhysiology & Behavior, 1984
- Externality in the nonobese: Effects of environmental responsiveness on weight.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1976
- Behavioral Regulation of the Milieu Interne in Man and RatScience, 1974