Individual differences in food-cue reactivity. The role of BMI and everyday portion-size selections

scientific article published on 25 February 2009

Individual differences in food-cue reactivity. The role of BMI and everyday portion-size selections is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1016/J.APPET.2009.02.005
P698PubMed publication ID19501758
P5875ResearchGate publication ID26271786

P50authorJeffrey M BrunstromQ66764535
P2093author name stringPaula Griffiths
Amanda Tetley
P433issue3
P304page(s)614-620
P577publication date2009-02-25
P1433published inAppetiteQ13430275
P1476titleIndividual differences in food-cue reactivity. The role of BMI and everyday portion-size selections
P478volume52

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q48202614'I just can't help myself': effects of food-cue exposure in overweight and lean individuals.
Q36323123A Cognitive Profile of Obesity and Its Translation into New Interventions
Q36859670Abdominal fat is associated with a greater brain reward response to high-calorie food cues in Hispanic women
Q47442593Brain dopamine and serotonin transporter binding are associated with visual attention bias for food in lean men.
Q57811702Cognitive Distortions in Normal-Weight and Overweight Women: Susceptibility to Thought-Shape Fusion
Q49185876Contributions of Pavlovian incentive motivation to cue-potentiated feeding
Q47638609Craving for Food in Virtual Reality Scenarios in Non-Clinical Sample: Analysis of its Relationship with Body Mass Index and Eating Disorder Symptoms.
Q35040267Design and implementation of a study evaluating extinction processes to food cues in obese children: the Intervention for Regulations of Cues Trial (iROC).
Q91941219Do restrained eaters show increased BMI, food craving and disinhibited eating? A comparison of the Restraint Scale and the Restrained Eating scale of the Dutch Eating Behaviour Questionnaire
Q58641586Effects of Weight Cue Reactivity on Self-Report Measures of Body Dissatisfaction
Q40352961Emotional eating and Pavlovian learning: evidence for conditioned appetitive responding to negative emotional states
Q36578145Enhanced cocaine-induced locomotor sensitization and intrinsic excitability of NAc medium spiny neurons in adult but not in adolescent rats susceptible to diet-induced obesity
Q39608094Examining the effects of remote-video confederates on young women's food intake
Q38661792Food cue reactivity and craving predict eating and weight gain: a meta-analytic review
Q89782254Food-Related Attentional Bias in Individuals with Normal Weight and Overweight: A Study with a Flicker Task
Q43118143Food-related odor probes of brain reward circuits during hunger: a pilot FMRI study
Q91779259Functional and structural plasticity contributing to obesity: roles for sex, diet, and individual susceptibility
Q26746183Gender-related Differences in Food Craving and Obesity
Q92608207How full is your glass? Portion sizes of wine, fortified wine and straight spirits at home in the Netherlands
Q36184927Individual Differences in Cue-Induced Motivation and Striatal Systems in Rats Susceptible to Diet-Induced Obesity
Q37067331Individual variation in resisting temptation: implications for addiction
Q49929246Marketing Food and Beverages to Youth Through Sports
Q30532886Neural correlates of stress- and food cue-induced food craving in obesity: association with insulin levels
Q36249101Pre-existing differences in motivation for food and sensitivity to cocaine-induced locomotion in obesity-prone rats
Q35695970Prediction of daily food intake as a function of measurement modality and restriction status
Q36131153Rationale and consequences of reclassifying obesity as an addictive disorder: neurobiology, food environment and social policy perspectives
Q38686854Role of addiction and stress neurobiology on food intake and obesity
Q38668194Sensory influences on food intake control: moving beyond palatability.
Q38033330Serving size guidance for consumers: is it effective?
Q36856818Stress as a common risk factor for obesity and addiction
Q36973753The Presence of Real Food Usurps Hypothetical Health Value Judgment in Overweight People

Search more.