Abstract

ObjectiveRestrained eating style and weight status are highly correlated. Though both have been associated with an attentional bias for food cues, in prior research restraint and BMI were often confounded. The aim of the present study was to determine the existence and nature of an attention bias for food cues in healthy-weight female restrained and unrestrained eaters, when matching the two groups on BMI. MethodAttention biases for food cues were measured by recordings of eye movements during a visual probe task with pictorial food versus non-food stimuli. Healthy weight high restrained (n=24) and low restrained eaters (n=21) were matched on BMI in an attempt to unconfound the effects of restraint and weight on attention allocation patterns. ResultsAll participants showed elevated attention biases for food stimuli in comparison to neutral stimuli, independent of restraint status. DiscussionThese findings suggest that attention biases for food-related cues are common for healthy weight women and show that restrained eating (per se) is not related to biased processing of food stimuli, at least not in healthy weight participants.

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