Sadness-associated eating styles and visual food cue reactivity: An eye-tracking investigation

Eat Behav. 2022 Apr:45:101604. doi: 10.1016/j.eatbeh.2022.101604. Epub 2022 Feb 23.

Abstract

Background: Emotional eating has been associated with biases of attention and memory for visual food cues. This eye-tracking study investigated whether the tendency to overeat in response to sadness is associated with the inspection and recall of visual food cues.

Method: Participants (n = 115, mean age = 26 years, 70 females, 45 males) viewed images depicting food and non-food. We compared gaze duration, 'hyperscanning' parameters (fixation duration, saccadic angle, scan path length), and recall performance between different image categories (high-calorie, low-calorie food, non-food) and groups with different sadness-associated eating styles (increased, decreased, unchanged food consumption during states of sadness).

Results: The group with sadness-related overeating reported a higher body mass index than the other groups, but neither displayed a visual attention bias nor memory bias for food cues. We observed a prolonged gaze duration for low-calorie food cues, which were rated as more appetizing than high-calorie cues. All participants recalled more food cues (low- and high-calorie) than non-food cues independent of gaze duration.

Conclusion: This study expanded previous research designs by groups that decrease vs. increase the amount eaten when feeling sad, and food/non-food images that were carefully matched for visual properties. Based on this approach, we were not able to show that self-disclosed sadness eating is associated with visual/memory biases for food images.

Keywords: Emotional eating; Eye-tracking; Food cue reactivity; Sadness eating.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Cues*
  • Eating / psychology
  • Energy Intake
  • Eye-Tracking Technology*
  • Female
  • Food
  • Humans
  • Hyperphagia
  • Male
  • Sadness