Abstract

Previous theorizing suggests there are multiple means by which people regulate their emotions and impulses, but that these strategies vary in the degree to which they support goal attainment. Some have proposed that proactive strategies (e.g. situation selection, distraction) may be particularly effective, while interventive strategies (e.g. suppression) are less effective. Despite these diverging predictions, researchers have yet to examine spontaneous use of these strategies and their respective and combined efficacy when applied to momentary food desires experienced in daily life. In the present study, we assessed eating patterns for one week via ecological momentary assessment in college-aged women (N = 106). Results from pre-registered analyses indicated that using a variety of strategies, including preventative strategies such as situation selection and distraction, was associated with greater self-control success, as indexed by weaker desires, higher resistance, lower likelihood of enacting desires, and less food consumed. A similar pattern was observed when participants implemented additional strategies during desire episodes, which they were more likely to do when their desires conflicted with other self-regulatory goals. All associations were observed while controlling for momentary hunger levels, dieting status, age, and body mass index. These findings are consistent with a growing body of work assessing people’s spontaneous use of emotion regulation strategies in everyday contexts, suggesting potential meta-motivational tendencies marked by flexible and adaptive use of self-regulatory strategies.

Highlights

  • Participants came into the lab to complete personality questionnaires and provide height and weight measurements. They underwent an fMRI scanning session in which they completed a food cue reactivity task. They enrolled in a week-long sampling of their daily eating behaviors, which were captured via an ecological momentary assessment (EMA) protocol consisting of seven surveys administered at random intervals across a 14-h window each day

  • The EMA surveys included assessment of self-regulatory strategy use, which served as key predictors in our pre-registered analyses, as well as different facets of eating behaviors that served as criterion measures of interest

  • Hypothesis 1: Strategy type First, to be consistent with what we indicated in our preregistration and to examine each strategy’s individual efficacy, we ran a set of models in which we included separate dummy-coded dichotomous predictors indicating which type of the four abovementioned regulatory strategies, if any, participants used during each desire episode

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Summary

Objectives

Building on the process model of self-control (Duckworth et al, 2016) and the concept of polyregulation, the overall aim of the present study was to examine spontaneous use of multiple regulatory strategies and the respective and combined efficacy of these strategies when applied to food desires people experience in daily life

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Results
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