Abstract

The majority of adults in the UK and US are overweight or obese due to multiple factors including excess energy intake. Training people to inhibit simple motor responses (key presses) to high-energy density food pictures reduces intake in laboratory studies. We examined whether online response inhibition training reduced real-world food consumption and weight in a community sample of adults who were predominantly overweight or obese (N = 83). Participants were allocated in a randomised, double-blind design to receive four 10-min sessions of either active or control go/no-go training in which either high-energy density snack foods (active) or non-food stimuli (control) were associated with no-go signals. Participants' weight, energy intake (calculated from 24-h food diaries), daily snacking frequency and subjective food evaluations were measured for one week pre- and post-intervention. Participants also provided self-reported weight and monthly snacking frequency at pre-intervention screening, and one month and six months after completing the study. Participants in the active relative to control condition showed significant weight loss, reductions in daily energy intake and a reduction in rated liking of high-energy density (no-go) foods from the pre-to post-intervention week. There were no changes in self-reported daily snacking frequency. At longer-term follow-up, the active group showed significant reductions in self-reported weight at six months, whilst both groups reported significantly less snacking at one- and six-months. Excellent rates of adherence (97%) and positive feedback about the training suggest that this intervention is acceptable and has the potential to improve public health by reducing energy intake and overweight.

Highlights

  • The prevalence of overweight and obesity has shown an increase over the past 30 years and the majority of adults in the US and UK are overweight or obese (65e70%; Flegal, 2005; Wang & Beydoun, 2007)

  • This study examined the feasibility and effectiveness of computerised response inhibition training to food on real-world energy intake and weight loss

  • Weight loss from baseline to post-intervention in the active group supports recent research showing that similar food no-go training facilitated weight loss (Veling et al, 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

The prevalence of overweight and obesity has shown an increase over the past 30 years and the majority of adults in the US and UK are overweight or obese (65e70%; Flegal, 2005; Wang & Beydoun, 2007). Individuals who show a strong reward-related response to foods combined with low levels of self-control are susceptible to overeating and overweight, whereas those with effective self-control appear to be protected (Lawrence et al, 2012; Nederkoorn, Houben, Hofmann, Roefs, & Jansen, 2010) This supports substantial evidence linking behavioural measures of poor self-control, namely motor response inhibition measured using stop-signal and go/no-go tasks (Verbruggen & Logan, 2008a), to overeating and overweight (Batterink, Yokum, & Stice, 2010; Guerrieri et al, 2007; Houben, Nederkoorn, & Jansen, 2014; Nederkoorn, Braet, Van Eijs, Tanghe, & Jansen, 2006a, 2012; 2006b). Regulation or reduction of foodrelated impulses seems to be required to control eating behaviour in our plentiful food environment and is a promising target for weight management interventions aimed at the habitual or impulsive system (Marteau, Hollands, & Fletcher, 2012; Van't Riet, Sijtsema, Dagevos, & Bruijn, 2011)

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