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Food as ego-protective remedy for people experiencing shame. Experimental evidence for a new perspective on weight-related shame

机译:食物是遭受羞辱的人的自我保护疗法。有关与体重相关的羞耻感的新观点的实验证据

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摘要

The well-explored association between shame and bulimia is based on research with clinical samples, which limits its generalizability. Moreover, these correlational studies are unable to draw clear conclusions about causality. To fill this gap, we conducted two experimental studies to examine whether shame elicits a desire for food in nonclinical participants. Compared with controls, participants experiencing shame found a buffet meal more desirable and were more likely to binge eat (Experiment 1); they also ate more than controls in a comparative taste test (Experiment 2). Our findings suggest that shame elicits the desire to obtain food to protect the devalued self but may lead to overeating and the risk of losing control over one's weight. We provide the first experimental evidence showing the link between shame and desire for food and offer a new perspective on the causal relationship between shame and binge eating.
机译:羞耻感和贪食症之间的良好关系是基于对临床样本的研究,这限制了其普遍性。此外,这些相关研究无法得出因果关系的明确结论。为了填补这一空白,我们进行了两项实验研究,以检验羞耻感是否会引起非临床参与者对食物的渴望。与对照组相比,感到羞耻的参与者发现自助餐更可取,并且更容易暴饮暴食(实验1);他们在对比味觉测试中也吃得比对照组多(实验2)。我们的发现表明,羞耻感促使人们渴望获得食物以保护贬值的自我,但可能导致暴饮暴食和失去控制体重的风险。我们提供了第一个实验证据,表明羞耻与对食物的渴望之间的联系,并为羞耻与暴饮暴食之间的因果关系提供了新的视角。

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