PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Get in my belly: food preferences trigger approach and avoidant postural asymmetries.

  • Tad T Brunyé,
  • Jackie F Hayes,
  • Caroline R Mahoney,
  • Aaron L Gardony,
  • Holly A Taylor,
  • Robin B Kanarek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072432
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 8
p. e72432

Abstract

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Appetitive motivational states are fundamental neural and behavioral mechanisms underlying healthy and abnormal eating behavior, though their dynamic influence on food-related behavior is unknown. The present study examined whether personal food-related preferences would activate approach and avoidance systems, modulating spontaneous postural sway toward and away from food items. Participants stood on a balance board that collected real-time data regarding postural sway along two axes (x, y) while they viewed a series of images depicting food items varying in nutritional value and individual preferences. Overall, participants showed reliable postural sway toward highly preferred and away from highly non-preferred items. This effect became more pronounced over time; sway along the mediolateral axis showed no reliable variation by preference. Results carry implications for two-factor (homeostatic versus hedonic) neurobehavioral theories of hunger and appetitive motivation, and carry applied clinical implications for the measurement and management of abnormal eating behavior.