PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Impaired Early-Response Inhibition in Overweight Females with and without Binge Eating Disorder.

  • Jennifer Svaldi,
  • Eva Naumann,
  • Stefanie Biehl,
  • Florian Schmitz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0133534
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7
p. e0133534

Abstract

Read online

Several studies report increased reward sensitivity towards food in overweight individuals. By contrast, data is inconclusive with respect to response inhibition in overweight individuals without binge eating disorder (BED). Hence, the latter was addressed in the present study in a group of overweight/obese females with and without BED and a normal-weight control group without eating disorders.A group of women with BED (n = 29), a group of overweight women without BED (n = 33) and normal-weight females (n = 30) participated in a pictorial priming paradigm, with food items (relevant primes) and office utensils (neutral primes) and color blobs (neutral primes) as stimuli. Increased response priming effects (i.e. priming with switches between stimulus categories) were taken as indicators of deficient behavioral inhibition.Priming effects for neutral primes were moderate and comparable across all groups. However, primes associated with the food task set lead to increased priming effects in both overweight groups. But, effects were comparable for overweight/obese participants with and without BED.Results suggest that early response inhibition in the context of food is impaired in overweight individuals compared to normal-weight individuals.