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Food Addiction and Mental Health (Adult Population)

Food addiction is commonly described as a pattern of compulsive overeating and intense cravings for highly palatable foods, where a person continues to eat in an “addiction-like” way despite negative physical, emotional, or social consequences. It typically involves strong, recurring cravings for specific foods, often those high in sugar, fat, and salt; loss of control over eating, such as eating more than intended or being unable to cut down despite repeated efforts; and continued overeating even when aware of harm (weight gain, health problems, distress), similar to substance use disorders. The Food Addiction and Mental Health Research Category explores the complex interplay between dietary behaviors, neurobiological reward systems, and psychological well-being, highlighting how compulsive eating patterns influence — and are influenced by — mental health conditions. Join the CNP Library Membership to learn more.

RESEARCH SUMMARIES

2018

A narrative review of the construct of hedonic hunger and its measurement by the Power of Food Scale

2020

The effect of hunger and satiety on mood-related food craving

CNP Research Summary can be found in the CNP Library Membership

2018

Causes of emotional eating and matched treatment of obesity

2020

Emotional eating in relation to worries and psychological distress emotional eating in relation to worries and psychological distress amid the COVID-19 Pandemic: A population-based survey on adults in Norway

CNP Research Summary can be found in the CNP Library Membership

2018

Neural correlates of dietary self-control in healthy adults: A meta-analysis of functional brain imaging studies

2019

Uncontrolled eating: A unifying heritable trait linked with obesity, overeating, personality and the brain

CNP Research Summary can be found in the CNP Library Membership

2020

Brain activity associated with regulating food cravings predicts changes in self-reported food craving and consumption over time

2016

Reward-induced eating: therapeutic approaches to addressing food cravings

CNP Research Summary can be found in the CNP Library Membership

2017

Food cravings in everyday life: An EMA study on snack-related thoughts, cravings, and consumption