Research Data

Datasets for: Prone to food in bad mood – Emotion potentiated food cue reactivity in patients with binge eating disorder.

Author(s) / Creator(s)

Arend, Ann-Kathtrin
Schnepper, Rebekka
Lutz, Annika
Eichin, Katharina Naomi
Blechert, Jens

Abstract / Description

Datasets for: Arend, A.-K., Schnepper, R., Lutz, A., Eichin, K., N., & Blechert, J. (2022). Prone to food in bad mood – Emotion potentiated food cue reactivity in patients with binge eating disorder. International Journal of Eating Disorders, 55(4), 564-569. https://doi.org/10.1002/eat.23683
Objective - Theories on emotional eating are central to our understanding of etiology, maintenance, and treatment of binge eating. Yet, findings on eating changes under induced negative emotions in binge-eating disorder (BED) are equivocal. Thus, we studied whether food-cue reactivity is potentiated under negative emotions in BED, which would point toward a causal role of emotional eating in this disorder. Methods - Patients with BED (n = 24) and a control group without eating disorders (CG; n = 69) completed a food picture reactivity task after induction of negative versus neutral emotions. Food-cue reactivity (self-reported food pleasantness, desire to eat [DTE], and corrugator supercilii muscle response, electromyogram [EMG]) was measured for low- and high-caloric food pictures. Results - Patients with BED showed emotion-potentiated food-cue reactivity compared to controls: Pleasantness and DTE ratings and EMG response were increased in BED during negative emotions. This was independent of caloric content of the images. Conclusions - Food-cue reactivity in BED was consistent with emotional eating theories and points to a heightened response to all foods regardless of calorie content. The discrepancy of appetitive ratings with the aversive corrugator response points to ambivalent food responses under negative emotions in individuals with BED.

Keyword(s)

binge-eating disorder corrugator supercilii desire to eat electromyography emotion induction emotional eating food-cue reactivity pleasantness

Persistent Identifier

Date of first publication

2021-07-28

Publisher

PsychArchives

Is referenced by

Citation

Arend, A.-K., Schnepper, R., Lutz, A., Eichin, K. N., & Blechert, J. (2021). Datasets for: Prone to food in bad mood – Emotion potentiated food cue reactivity in patients with binge eating disorder. [Data set]. PsychArchives. https://doi.org/10.23668/PSYCHARCHIVES.5003
  • codebook_ratings.csv
    CSV - 0.73KB
    MD5: 09a18dc28fe7121bdc257910fdc4a3b7
    Description: codebook for rating data
    Rationale for choice of sharing level: We would like to ensure that usage of their content is restricted to the context of scientific analysis and discourse.
  • data_corrugator.Rdata
    Unknown - 83.4KB
    MD5: 7dcdba2a4a6bc3f5edc80c3ec05eb8c6
    Description: R data (corrugator)
    Rationale for choice of sharing level: We would like to ensure that usage of their content is restricted to the context of scientific analysis and discourse.
  • data_descriptives_and_emotion_manipulation_check.csv
    CSV - 17.95KB
    MD5: 57aab89e50a0ffd1934cbbda02958926
    Description: CSV data for descriptives and manipulation check
    Rationale for choice of sharing level: We would like to ensure that usage of their content is restricted to the context of scientific analysis and discourse.
  • data_ratings.Rdata
    Unknown - 82.96KB
    MD5: a5153b3e7435e364dbf53597969435fe
    Description: R data (ratings)
    Rationale for choice of sharing level: We would like to ensure that usage of their content is restricted to the context of scientific analysis and discourse.
  • codebook_corrugator.csv
    CSV - 0.59KB
    MD5: fcab6b4a60cd7cb5a311ed9f203b8d40
    Description: codebook for corrugator data
    Rationale for choice of sharing level: We would like to ensure that usage of their content is restricted to the context of scientific analysis and discourse.
  • codebook_descriptives_and_emotion_manipulation_check.csv
    CSV - 0.59KB
    MD5: fcab6b4a60cd7cb5a311ed9f203b8d40
    Description: codebook for descriptive and manipulation check data
    Rationale for choice of sharing level: We would like to ensure that usage of their content is restricted to the context of scientific analysis and discourse.
  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Arend, Ann-Kathtrin
  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Schnepper, Rebekka
  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Lutz, Annika
  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Eichin, Katharina Naomi
  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Blechert, Jens
  • PsychArchives acquisition timestamp
    2021-07-28T15:06:08Z
  • Made available on
    2021-07-28T15:06:08Z
  • Date of first publication
    2021-07-28
  • Abstract / Description
    Datasets for: Arend, A.-K., Schnepper, R., Lutz, A., Eichin, K., N., & Blechert, J. (2022). Prone to food in bad mood – Emotion potentiated food cue reactivity in patients with binge eating disorder. International Journal of Eating Disorders, 55(4), 564-569. https://doi.org/10.1002/eat.23683
    en
  • Abstract / Description
    Objective - Theories on emotional eating are central to our understanding of etiology, maintenance, and treatment of binge eating. Yet, findings on eating changes under induced negative emotions in binge-eating disorder (BED) are equivocal. Thus, we studied whether food-cue reactivity is potentiated under negative emotions in BED, which would point toward a causal role of emotional eating in this disorder. Methods - Patients with BED (n = 24) and a control group without eating disorders (CG; n = 69) completed a food picture reactivity task after induction of negative versus neutral emotions. Food-cue reactivity (self-reported food pleasantness, desire to eat [DTE], and corrugator supercilii muscle response, electromyogram [EMG]) was measured for low- and high-caloric food pictures. Results - Patients with BED showed emotion-potentiated food-cue reactivity compared to controls: Pleasantness and DTE ratings and EMG response were increased in BED during negative emotions. This was independent of caloric content of the images. Conclusions - Food-cue reactivity in BED was consistent with emotional eating theories and points to a heightened response to all foods regardless of calorie content. The discrepancy of appetitive ratings with the aversive corrugator response points to ambivalent food responses under negative emotions in individuals with BED.
    en
  • Review status
    unknown
  • Sponsorship
    Austrian Science Fund. Grant Numbers: W1233-B, Doctoral College “Imaging the Mind”; Fonds National de la Recherche Luxembourg. Grant Number: 8371546 EMO-EAT; H2020 European Research Council. Grant Number: ERC-StG-2014 639445 NewEat
    en
  • Citation
    Arend, A.-K., Schnepper, R., Lutz, A., Eichin, K. N., & Blechert, J. (2021). Datasets for: Prone to food in bad mood – Emotion potentiated food cue reactivity in patients with binge eating disorder. [Data set]. PsychArchives. https://doi.org/10.23668/PSYCHARCHIVES.5003
    en
  • Persistent Identifier
    https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/4431
  • Persistent Identifier
    https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.5003
  • Language of content
    eng
  • Publisher
    PsychArchives
    en
  • Is referenced by
    https://doi.org/10.1002/eat.23683
  • Is related to
    https://www.psycharchives.org/handle/20.500.12034/4430
  • Is related to
    https://doi.org/10.1002/eat.23683
  • Keyword(s)
    binge-eating disorder
    en
  • Keyword(s)
    corrugator supercilii
    en
  • Keyword(s)
    desire to eat
    en
  • Keyword(s)
    electromyography
    en
  • Keyword(s)
    emotion induction
    en
  • Keyword(s)
    emotional eating
    en
  • Keyword(s)
    food-cue reactivity
    en
  • Keyword(s)
    pleasantness
    en
  • Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)
    150
  • Title
    Datasets for: Prone to food in bad mood – Emotion potentiated food cue reactivity in patients with binge eating disorder.
    en
  • DRO type
    researchData
    en