Understanding dieting: A social cognitive analysis of hedonic processes in self-regulation
Publication date
2008
Authors
Papies, Esther K.
Stroebe, Wolfgang
Aarts, Henk
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
The present paper introduces a novel approach to understanding failures of
self-regulation in chronic dieters. Traditional approaches to this problem have
focused on consciously controlled processes of eating regulation, such as the
realisation that one has overeaten, or the experience of food cravings. We
argue, however, that dieters’ problem might rather lie in their sensitivity to the
hedonic aspects of food and the resulting inhibition of their dieting goal. We
present a goal-conflict model that integrates recent findings on hedonic
sensitivity in eating regulation with social cognition research on nonconscious
goal pursuit. We show that the perception of attractive food triggers hedonic
thoughts about food in chronic dieters and leads to the inhibition of their
dieting goal. These processes make subsequent overeating more likely, while
bypassing dieters’ conscious awareness. We discuss how our model can
accommodate earlier research findings in this area, and we consider its
implications for dieting behaviour and for our attempts to resist temptations
more generally.