homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Impulsive personality is linked to food addiction, study shows

The result of a new study of University of Georgia shows up that the same type of impulsive behavior that leads to drug addiction or alcoholism is proven to influence some people’s unhealthy relationship with food. The journal Appetite recently published the paper about this research finding that people who have impulsive personalities are, indeed, […]

livia rusu
February 5, 2014 @ 1:02 pm

share Share

The result of a new study of University of Georgia shows up that the same type of impulsive behavior that leads to drug addiction or alcoholism is proven to influence some people’s unhealthy relationship with food.

The journal Appetite recently published the paper about this research finding that people who have impulsive personalities are, indeed, more likely to develop food addictions, similarly to the impulsive people prone to develop drug addictions and alcoholism. But this time the behavior links their personality with a completely different type of addiction, at its turn leading to obesity.

James MacKillop is associate professor of psychology in University of Georgia (UGA)’s Franklin College of Arts and Sciences. His usual area of study concerns research of the effects of alcohol, nicotine and other drugs on people. Being the principal investigator in this last study, he declared that there is a possibility that obesity linked to food addiction and impulsiveness follow the same pattern as some of the drugs.

This investigation’s even more important if we link it to the data obtained from the Center of Disease Control and Prevention in the United States of America, officially showing that more than a third of the American adult population suffers of obesity. At its turn, this fact has some severe implications, including an even unhealthier life style based by the power of habit leading to addiction and a large spectrum of diseases such as type two diabetes, heart affections, and strokes.

The scales used during the research are both internationally recognized – Yale Food Addiction Scale and UPPS-P Impulsive Behavior Scale, in order to settle levels of impulsivity and food addiction among the 233 subjects. The obtained results were then compared with the mass index of each subject, commonly used in determining obesity.

MacKillop declared that while ‘our study shows that impulsive behavior was not necessarily associated with obesity, impulsive behaviors can lead to food addiction’. The connectivity between impulsiveness and food addiction doesn’t mean that someone with an impulsive personality will necessarily become obese, but rather that among the number of obese people most of their behaviors are impulsive.

This is one of the first studies of addictive eating habits and its contribution to obesity, and linking it with this personality trait makes it easier to be stopped. The study was sponsored by UGA’s Obesity Initiative and the team is going to expand their research and determine the brain activity of distinct subjects during their decision making process about food.

 

 

share Share

Everyone else’s opinion is secretly changing yours (and that's huge for disinformation)

Public opinion may be swaying you a lot more than you think.

Magic Mushroom Use Is Soaring in the U.S. With More Americans Turning to Psilocybin Than Cocaine or Meth

Use is up across all age groups, with rising poison calls and shifting perceptions

What happens in your brain when your mind goes completely blank — neuroscientists say it's a distinct mental state

Mind blanking isn’t daydreaming. It's something more akin to meditation — but not quite the same.

Scientists Just Found the Clearest Evidence Yet That Lucid Dreaming Is a Real State of Consciousness

People who are aware they are dreaming show distinct brain patterns.

Conservative people in the US distrust science way more broadly than previously thought

Even chemistry gets side-eye now. Trust in science is crumbling across America's ideology.

Some people are just wired to like music more, study shows

Most people enjoy music to some extent. But while some get goosebumps from their favorite song, others don’t really feel that much. A part of that is based on our culture. But according to one study, about half of it is written in our genes. In one of the largest twin studies on musical pleasure […]

The Number of Americans Who Don’t Want Kids At All Has Doubled Since 2002

The share of ‘childfree’ adults has doubled since 2002, new research shows.

A Dutch 17-Year-Old Forgot His Native Language After Knee Surgery and Spoke Only English Even Though He Had Never Used It Outside School

He experienced foreign language syndrome for about 24 hours, and remembered every single detail of the incident even after recovery.

Looks Matter Most on Dating Apps By Far. And That's True for Both Men and Women

If you're struggling on dating apps, it's not because of your bio.

Just 10 Minutes of Mindfulness a Day Can Boost Your Mental Health

Daily short mindfulness sessions significantly reduce depression and anxiety while encouraging healthier lifestyles.