PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Alleged Approach-Avoidance Conflict for Food Stimuli in Binge Eating Disorder.

  • Elisabeth J Leehr,
  • Kathrin Schag,
  • Amelie Brinkmann,
  • Ann-Christine Ehlis,
  • Andreas J Fallgatter,
  • Stephan Zipfel,
  • Katrin E Giel,
  • Thomas Dresler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152271
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
p. e0152271

Abstract

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OBJECTIVE:Food stimuli are omnipresent and naturally primary reinforcing stimuli. One explanation for the intake of high amounts of food in binge eating disorder (BED) is a deviant valuation process. Valuation of food stimuli is supposed to influence approach or avoidance behaviour towards food. Focusing on self-reported and indirect (facial electromyography) valuation process, motivational aspects in the processing of food stimuli were investigated. METHODS:We compared an overweight sample with BED (BED+) with an overweight sample without BED (BED-) and with normal weight controls (NWC) regarding their self-reported and indirect (via facial electromyography) valuation of food versus non-food stimuli. RESULTS:Regarding the self-reported valuation, the BED+ sample showed a significantly stronger food-bias compared to the BED- sample, as food stimuli were rated as significantly more positive than the non-food stimuli in the BED+ sample. This self-reported valuation pattern could not be displayed in the indirect valuation. Food stimuli evoked negative indirect valuation in all groups. The BED+ sample showed the plainest approach-avoidance conflict marked by a diverging self-reported (positive) and indirect (negative) valuation of food stimuli. CONCLUSIONS:BED+ showed a deviant self-reported valuation of food as compared to BED-. The valuation process of the BED+ sample seems to be characterized by a motivational ambivalence. This ambivalence should be subject of further studies and may be of potential use for therapeutic interventions.