Author:
GREEN MICHAEL W.,ROGERS PETER J.
Abstract
Background. The current study investigated the fundamental
nature of the cognitive processing
deficit that has been demonstrated to be associated with dieting to
lose weight. Previous work has
characterized this deficit as being primarily one of a reduction in working-memory
capacity. The
present study investigated the particular components of the working-memory
system affected
during dieting.Method. A sample of female subjects was classified as either
low/medium restrained eaters (N=34),
highly restrained eaters (N=18) or current dieters (N=19),
based on
their responses to a modified
version of the Dutch Eating Behaviour Questionnaire (DEBQ). Each subject
completed tasks that
assessed the Visuo-Spatial Sketchpad (mental rotation), Phonological
Loop (effect of phonological
similarity on recall) and the Central Executive (Tower of London Task)
components of working
memory.Results. Those subjects who reported themselves to be currently
dieting displayed poorer recall on
the Phonological Loop task and slower planning times on the Tower of London
Task. Performance
on both these tasks correlated significantly with a self-report measure
of body shape concern.Conclusions. These results support the hypothesis that the
mediating variable in this deficit is that
of preoccupying cognitions concerning food and body shape.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
83 articles.
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