scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P50 | author | Glyn W. Humphreys | Q16729973 |
Suzanne Higgs | Q48951635 | ||
P2093 | author name string | Dirk Dolmans | |
Femke Rutters | |||
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Selective attention to food-related stimuli in hunger: are attentional biases specific to emotional and psychopathological states, or are they also found in normal drive states? | Q38453245 | ||
Selective attention to food and body shape words in dieters and restrained nondieters | Q38468213 | ||
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Electrophysiological evidence for enhanced representation of food stimuli in working memory | Q46349372 | ||
Eat it or beat it. The differential effects of food temptations on overweight and normal-weight restrained eaters. | Q47433945 | ||
Dissociating effects of stimulus identity and load on working memory attentional guidance: lengthening encoding time eliminates the effect of load but not identity | Q47603711 | ||
Top down modulation of attention to food cues via working memory | Q47979746 | ||
Automatic guidance of visual attention from verbal working memory | Q48138702 | ||
Obese adults have visual attention bias for food cue images: evidence for altered reward system function | Q48267409 | ||
Attentional and approach biases for pictorial food cues. Influence of external eating | Q48313322 | ||
Healthy cognition: processes of self-regulatory success in restrained eating | Q48334297 | ||
Leading us not unto temptation: momentary allurements elicit overriding goal activation | Q48605422 | ||
Restrained eating, obesity, and cumulative food intake curves during four-course meals | Q48873035 | ||
The three-factor eating questionnaire to measure dietary restraint, disinhibition and hunger | Q48984819 | ||
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Components of attentional bias for food cues among restrained eaters. | Q51598169 | ||
Do the contents of working memory capture attention? Yes, but cognitive control matters. | Q51889934 | ||
Early, involuntary top-down guidance of attention from working memory. | Q51992855 | ||
Interactions between visual working memory and selective attention. | Q52139851 | ||
Restrained eating is related to accelerated reaction to high caloric foods and cardiac autonomic dysregulation. | Q53092421 | ||
Effects of manipulated palatability on appetite depend on restraint and disinhibition scores from the Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire | Q79187328 | ||
P407 | language of work or name | English | Q1860 |
P921 | main subject | self-control | Q1405524 |
P304 | page(s) | 427 | |
P577 | publication date | 2015-04-13 | |
P1433 | published in | Frontiers in Psychology | Q2794477 |
P1476 | title | Dietary self-control influences top-down guidance of attention to food cues | |
P478 | volume | 6 |
Q49643184 | Considering sex differences in the cognitive controls of feeding. |
Q37502071 | Dieting and Food Cue-Related Working Memory Performance |
Q39138137 | Restrained Eating and Food Cues: Recent Findings and Conclusions |
Q64257983 | The Cognitive Control of Eating and Body Weight: It's More Than What You "Think" |
Q60054733 | Top-down guidance of attention to food cues is enhanced in individuals with overweight/obesity and predicts change in weight at one-year follow up |
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