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Eating Behaviour 1 • This session focuses on what affects our eating behaviour: culture, mood, health, and diet. Biological explanations are considered as well as eating disorders 2 Eating Behaviour 3 Culture • Social Norms – What is acceptable socially as food? • Religious norms – Hindu and Jewish rules • Learning – Parents and family; peers; social learning, conditioning • Schemas – Cultural norms 4 Mood • Low mood – Carbohydrate cravings – Conditioning, social learning, serotonin, or endorphin rush? • Chocolate – Psychotropic effect? (Parker et al., 2006) – Sensory pleasure – Social learning or conditioning (Macht & Dettmer, 2006) • Caffeine – Increased positive mood (Smith et al., 2003) – Noradrenaline and cognition • Serotonin and noradrenaline – Low levels and low mood – Affects tastiness of food and hence amount eaten 5 Health Concerns Healthy diet, food safety, food quality • UK government survey – Awareness of concerns a mismatch with eating behaviour – Obesity problem • Cheap food – Quality, availability, and advertising • Fruits and organic/higher quality food – Cost and availability • Trust in official information 6 Dieting Success or failure? • 22% of UK adults are obese, 75% overweight – Lopez-Jimenez (2008) • Short-term success in dieting to lose weight – Environmental and biological factors • Psychological factors • Exercise 7 Biological Explanations of Eating Behaviour 8 Neural Mechanisms Hunger, satiety, and the brain • Hypothalamic eating control centres – LH and VMH, cortex and amygdala (de Araujo et al., 2006) • Insulin, leptin, and blood glucose level – – – – – Rosenzweig et al. (2002) Lavin et al. (1996) Horvath (2005 Licinio et al. (2004) and London (2007) Ravussin et al. (1997) vs. Johnstone et al. (2006) • PYY hormone – Batterham et al. (2007) 9 Control of eating behaviour. 10 Evolutionary Explanations of Food Preference • Foods high in energy and nutrients aid survival to reproduce – Cross-cultural preference for protein, fats/oils, sugar – Nutrient-dense and energy-dense – Adaptive to be omnivorous – Paleolithic diet (Eaton & Konner, 1985) – AMY1 gene distribution – Brain size 11 Alcohol • Part of the human diet from the beginning • Scent aids finding ripe fruit – Dudley (2002) • Reduces cardiovascular disease, increases lifespan, source of energy – Consumption adaptive • Disinfectant nature – Ridley (1999) • Mu opiate brain receptors and endorphins – Alcohol and pleasure 12 Eating Disorders 13 Anorexia Nervosa Clinical characteristics: • DSM-IV criteria – Less than 85% expected body weight – Intense fear of weight gain – Maladaptive cognition about personal body weight – If female, amenorrhoea • 90% sufferers are female • 0.5% frequency in the West • Possible long-term serious physiological changes 14 Bulimia Nervosa Clinical characteristics: • DSM-IV criteria – Numerous episodes of binge eating – Frequent inappropriate compensatory behaviours, e.g. purging – Frequency of the above – Maladaptive cognition about oneself – Bingeing and purging outside anorexia episodes • Significant increase in past 40 years in the West • Possible long-term physical damage 15 Anorexia vs. Bulimia • Often starts during adolescence • Often follows dieting • Associated with anxieties and depression • Involves maladaptive thinking • Still rare • Serious weight loss, less than 85% of expected • Not so sociable or concerned with attractiveness, more selffocused, concerned with control • Often starts during adolescence • Often follows dieting • Associated with anxieties and depression • Involves maladaptive thinking • Becoming common • No serious weight loss, within 10% of expected • Sociable, concerned with attractiveness, have mood swings, impulsive 16 Biological Explanations • Inherited maladaptive genes – Family and twin studies • Strober and Humphrey (1987), Holland et al. (1988), Kendler et al. (1991) – Environment and culture • Loehlin and Nichols (1976), Comer (2001) – Anorexia genes associated with perfectionism • Bachner-Melman et al. (2007) – Adoption studies – Possible under-diagnosis in males 17 Neurochemicals Serotonin and bulimia • Low serotonin activity – Carrasco et al. (2000) • Serotonin gene predisposition – Monteleone et al. (2007) • Same serotonin transporter gene – In different bulimic types (Wonderlich et al., 2005) • Diathesis–Stress model 18 Psychological Explanations Psychodynamic model Causes: • Repressed fears • Unconscious desire to remain a child • Lack of identity/enmeshed family • Ineffective parenting 19 Cognitive Model Causes: • Maladaptive cognitions, e.g. about body shape and size, effects of food • Perfectionism in mothers • Low self-esteem of sufferers and mothers 20 Cultural Model Causes: • Disorders much more common in the West • Rare in traditional non-Western cultures • Increase as Western culture introduced • Body dissatisfaction is greater in the West • Cultural pressures are greater in adolescent girls 21 Evolutionary Theory Causes: • Eating disorder-type behaviour was adaptive for our ancestors • Bingeing when food was plentiful • Over-expression of eating behaviour genes • Anorexics would not drain food resources • Anorexia could demonstrate acceptance of defeat 22 Obesity • Too much body fat • Linked to cardiovascular disease, hypertension, shorter lifespan • Increased in UK in past 25 years • UK frequency of over 20% both sexes Causes: • Over-eating, poor diet, lack of exercise, maladaptive genes 23 Psychodynamic Explanations • Food is a symbol for love • Oral fixation of sufferers • Preferred foods resemble breast milk, i.e. sweet and creamy • Untestable 24 Learning Theory Explanations Causes: • Maladaptive learning • Conditioning and social learning • Energy-dense foods given as rewards • Affluence and over-eating • Obese role models 25 Environmental/Lifestyle Explanations • Obesity is a new disorder Causes: • General lack of exercise and calorie-rich diets • Children take little exercise • Faulty estimations of food intake and exercise 26 Genetic Explanations • Family studies – Stunkard et al. (1986) • Ethnic group studies – Caucasian, Afro-Caribbean, and Hispanic • Twin and adoption studies – Plomin et al. (1997), Mark (2006) • Genetic variants identified – Henderson (2008) 27