Abstract

BackgroundBinge eating disorder (BED) represents a distinct eating disorder diagnosis. Current approaches assume increased impulsivity to be one factor leading to binge eating and weight gain. We used eye tracking to investigate both components of impulsivity, namely reward sensitivity and rash-spontaneous behaviour towards food in BED for the first time.MethodsOverweight and obese people with BED (BED+; n = 25), without BED (BED−; n = 26) and healthy normal-weight controls (NWC; n = 25) performed a free exploration paradigm measuring reward sensitivity (experiment 1) and a modified antisaccade paradigm measuring disinhibited, rash-spontaneous behaviour (experiment 2) using food and nonfood stimuli. Additionally, trait impulsivity was assessed.ResultsIn experiment 1, all participants located their initial fixations more often on food stimuli and BED+ participants gazed longer on food stimuli in comparison with BED− and NWC participants. In experiment 2, BED+ participants had more difficulties inhibiting saccades towards food and nonfood stimuli compared with both other groups in first saccades, and especially towards food stimuli in second saccades and concerning sequences of first and second saccades. BED− participants did not differ significantly from NWC participants in both experiments. Additionally, eye tracking performance was associated with self-reported reward responsiveness and self-control.ConclusionsAccording to these results, food-related reward sensitivity and rash-spontaneous behaviour, as the two components of impulsivity, are increased in BED in comparison with weight-matched and normal-weight controls. This indicates that BED represents a neurobehavioural phenotype of obesity that is characterised by increased impulsivity. Interventions for BED should target these special needs of affected patients.

Highlights

  • Binge Eating Disorder (BED) represents an empirically validated eating disorder [1,2,3] that is a distinct eating disorder in the new release of the diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (DSM-5) [4,5]

  • To control for the influence of both overweight and eating disorder, we investigated two control groups: obese participants without Binge eating disorder (BED) (BED2) with matched body mass index (BMI) and healthy normal- weight control participants (NWC)

  • Groups were comparable with respect to educational status, marital status, and nationality. 8 participants (11% of the whole sample) currently used antidepressants, with 6 of them using selective serotonergic reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)

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Summary

Introduction

Binge Eating Disorder (BED) represents an empirically validated eating disorder [1,2,3] that is a distinct eating disorder in the new release of the diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (DSM-5) [4,5]. There is first evidence that obese people with and without BED show different genetic expressions concerning reward sensitivity [14], and on a behavioural level, we assume in our recent review [15] that obese people with BED show even more pronounced deficits than obese people without BED in both food-related reward sensitivity and rash-spontaneous behaviour. This leads to the assumption that BED represents an enhanced neurobehavioural phenotype of obesity [16]. We used eye tracking to investigate both components of impulsivity, namely reward sensitivity and rash-spontaneous behaviour towards food in BED for the first time

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