Dietary self-control influences top-down guidance of attention to food cues

scientific article

Dietary self-control influences top-down guidance of attention to food cues is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.3389/FPSYG.2015.00427
P932PMC publication ID4394661
P698PubMed publication ID25918509
P5875ResearchGate publication ID275251893

P50authorGlyn W. HumphreysQ16729973
Suzanne HiggsQ48951635
P2093author name stringDirk Dolmans
Femke Rutters
P2860cites workThe neural basis of drug craving: an incentive-sensitization theory of addictionQ29547475
Attentional bias to food images associated with elevated weight and future weight gain: an fMRI studyQ33554569
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 nondietersQ38468213
Preoccupation, food, and failure: an investigation of cognitive performance deficits in dietersQ44800783
Electrophysiological evidence for enhanced representation of food stimuli in working memoryQ46349372
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 identityQ47603711
Top down modulation of attention to food cues via working memoryQ47979746
Automatic guidance of visual attention from verbal working memoryQ48138702
Obese adults have visual attention bias for food cue images: evidence for altered reward system functionQ48267409
Attentional and approach biases for pictorial food cues. Influence of external eatingQ48313322
Healthy cognition: processes of self-regulatory success in restrained eatingQ48334297
Leading us not unto temptation: momentary allurements elicit overriding goal activationQ48605422
Restrained eating, obesity, and cumulative food intake curves during four-course mealsQ48873035
The three-factor eating questionnaire to measure dietary restraint, disinhibition and hungerQ48984819
Working memory performance and preoccupying thoughts in female dieters: evidence for a selective central executive impairmentQ50304259
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 QuestionnaireQ79187328
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjectself-controlQ1405524
P304page(s)427
P577publication date2015-04-13
P1433published inFrontiers in PsychologyQ2794477
P1476titleDietary self-control influences top-down guidance of attention to food cues
P478volume6

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q49643184Considering sex differences in the cognitive controls of feeding.
Q37502071Dieting and Food Cue-Related Working Memory Performance
Q39138137Restrained Eating and Food Cues: Recent Findings and Conclusions
Q64257983The Cognitive Control of Eating and Body Weight: It's More Than What You "Think"
Q60054733Top-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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