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  • Nutritional psychology
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Diet and Emotions/Emotional Eating

Diet and Emotions/Emotional Eating (Adult Population)

The CNP Diet and Emotions/Emotional Eating Research Category consolidates research exploring the interdependent relationship between dietary intake, emotions, and emotional eating. While this is its own research category, dietary intake, emotions, and eating behavior often intertwine. For this reason, you may see studies in this research category that could just as easily been placed in the Diet and Behavior research category (and vice versa). To view each original study on the open internet, click “Original.” To view the CNP-written abstract summary, click “CNP Summary.” While only some of the CNP-written abstract summaries are available below for free, all abstract summaries are available to CNP members through the CNP Library Membership.

Behavioral evidence of emotion dysregulation in binge eaters

  • Karim Maghraby, M.B.B.Ch, M.Sc, Director
  • 13 February 2021
  • Reviewed By CNP STAFF
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This CNP Research Summary is protected. Become a CNP Library Member to access it.

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Related Studies

Food for love: The role of food offering in empathic emotion regulation

  • Karim Maghraby, M.B.B.Ch, M.Sc, Director
  • 13 February 2021
  • Reviewed By CNP STAFF

In this article by Hamburg et al. (2014), the authors investigate the inter-and intra-personal precedent factors and sequelae of offering food. The action of offering food represents one of the earliest biobehavioral governing exchanges that occur between parents and their children. Offering food secures the survival of a child who depends entirely on others to […]

Associations among fear, disgust, and eating pathology in undergraduate men and women

  • Karim Maghraby, M.B.B.Ch, M.Sc, Director
  • 13 February 2021
  • Reviewed By CNP STAFF

Anderson et al. (2018) write that while fear and disgust are separate emotions both previously linked with eating disorders, it is possible that one is more strongly associated with eating disorders than the other. This study therefore aimed to discover the relative importance of fear and disgust in accounting for variance in eating disorder symptoms. […]

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