Elsevier

NeuroImage: Clinical

Volume 18, 2018, Pages 702-712
NeuroImage: Clinical

Food product health warnings promote dietary self-control through reductions in neural signals indexing food cue reactivity

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2018.03.004Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Food product health warnings successfully promote dietary self-control.

  • ERP components P3 and LPP sensitive to food characteristics and health warnings

  • LPP amplitudes also directly predict dietary self-control.

  • Health warnings useful to reduce appetitive food responses in obesity prevention

Abstract

Modern societies are replete with palatable food cues. A growing body of evidence suggests that food cue exposure activates conditioned appetitive physiological and psychological responses that may override current metabolic needs and existing eating goals, such as the desire to maintain a healthy diet. This conditioned response results in unhealthy dietary choices and is a contributing factor in the current obesity epidemic. Prime based obesity prevention measures such as health warnings at point-of-sale or on product packaging may have the potential to counteract the influence of the obesogenic environment at the crucial moment when people make food purchasing or consumption decisions. Existing research into the efficacy of these intervention strategies has predominantly employed self-report and population level measures, and little evidence exists to support the contention that these measures counteract food cue reactivity at the time of decision making. Using a dietary self-control priming paradigm, we demonstrated that brief exposure to food product health warnings enhanced dietary self-control. Further, we analysed electroencephalographic correlates of selective attention and food cue evoked craving (N1, P3, LPP) to show that health warning exposure reduced the automatic appetitive response towards palatable food cues. These findings contribute to existing evidence that exogenous information can successfully prime latent goals, and substantiate the notion that food product health warnings may provide a new avenue through which to curb excessive energy intake and reduce rising obesity rates.

Keywords

Health warnings
Dietary decision making
Self-control
Electroencephalogram
EEG
N1
P3
LPP

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