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Old 05-18-2010, 10:42 AM   #1  
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Default The psychology of food cravings.

I found this at physorg.com. And thought is was interesting.
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The psychology of food cravings
May 17th, 2010 in Medicine & Health / Psychology & Psychiatry

Swimsuit season is almost upon us. For most of us, the countdown has begun to lazy days lounging by the pool and relaxing on the beach. However, for some of us, the focus is not so much on sunglasses and beach balls, but how to quickly shed those final five or ten pounds in order to look good poolside. It is no secret that dieting can be challenging and food cravings can make it even more difficult. Why do we get intense desires to eat certain foods? Although food cravings are a common experience, researchers have only recently begun studying how food cravings emerge. Psychological scientists Eva Kemps and Marika Tiggemann of Flinders University, Australia, review the latest research on food cravings and how they may be controlled in the current issue of Current Directions in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

We've all experienced hunger (where eating anything will suffice), but what makes food cravings different from hunger is how specific they are. We don't just want to eat something; instead, we want barbecue potato chips or cookie dough ice cream. Many of us experience food cravings from time to time, but for certain individuals, these cravings can pose serious health risks. For example, food cravings have been shown to elicit binge-eating episodes, which can lead to obesity and eating disorders. In addition, giving in to food cravings can trigger feelings of guilt and shame.

Where do food cravings come from? Many research studies suggest that mental imagery may be a key component of food cravings — when people crave a specific food, they have vivid images of that food. Results of one study showed that the strength of participants' cravings was linked to how vividly they imagined the food. Mental imagery (imagining food or anything else) takes up cognitive resources, or brain power. Studies have shown that when subjects are imagining something, they have a hard time completing various cognitive tasks. In one experiment, volunteers who were craving chocolate recalled fewer words and took longer to solve math problems than volunteers who were not craving chocolate. These links between food cravings and mental imagery, along with the findings that mental imagery takes up cognitive resources, may help to explain why food cravings can be so disruptive: As we are imagining a specific food, much of our brain power is focused on that food, and we have a hard time with other tasks.

New research findings suggest that that this relationship may work in the opposite direction as well: It may be possible to use cognitive tasks to reduce food cravings. The results of one experiment revealed that volunteers who had been craving a food reported reduced food cravings after they formed images of common sights (for example, they were asked to imagine the appearance of a rainbow) or smells (they were asked to imagine the smell of eucalyptus). In another experiment, volunteers who were craving a food watched a flickering pattern of black and white dots on a monitor (similar to an untuned television set). After viewing the pattern, they reported a decrease in the vividness of their craved-food images as well as a reduction in their cravings. According the researchers, these findings indicate that "engaging in a simple visual task seems to hold real promise as a method for curbing food cravings." The authors suggest that "real-world implementations could incorporate the dynamic visual noise display into existing accessible technologies, such as the smart phone and other mobile, hand-held computing devices." They conclude that these experimental approaches may extend beyond food cravings and have implications for reducing cravings of other substances such as drugs and alcohol.

Provided by Association for Psychological Science
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Old 05-18-2010, 12:21 PM   #2  
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Isn't that interesting! I'll have to explore that the next time I get cravings!! Thanks for the article!
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Old 05-18-2010, 10:38 PM   #3  
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This is very interesting to me, because I have this issue when I am at my laptop working for long periods of time. It happens at the office more than when I work from home. I have been wondering if cravings are a sign that I am seeking some kind of sensation (not necessarily taste) or a change-up when I am feeling bored & unstimulated from having to focus on the same difficult & uninteresting thing for too long. When I work from home, I can get up & do some small thing that needs doing. (Tossing out recycling, making the bed.) When I am at the office, the options are more limited. And I think the sensation-seeking part of me gets into trouble at those times. This is when I fixate on a particular food. I do think it's due to my imagination, too. It's usually a food I saw & passed by or that someone mentioned & it made me conjure it. Somehow, it was put there, and I retrieve the image & fixate on it.

Also I think advertisers exploit this tendency by putting food into our minds that we'd never think to eat, except they have already embedded the image there for us to find when we get in this mood.

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Old 05-18-2010, 10:55 PM   #4  
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Fascinating! I find the part about mental imagery especially true. I know that when I'm watching television and a particularly enticing commercial comes on I just shut my eyes and that seems to interrupt the "sight-sound continuum" as I call it. Works really well. It also explains how we can be distracted from cravings.

Food cravings are one of those things that it seems like the more questions we have answered the more come up. Like, why do I crave some things like jelly beans or ranch dressing out of the blue when I don't dislike them but they're not my favories either? Why do some cravings seem to last for days or even weeks?
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Old 05-19-2010, 09:11 AM   #5  
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Thanks for posting! That's very interesting. I know that often people suggest a nice bubble bath to get rid of a craving--I've never tried it, but I wonder if it actually would work because fo the scent of the products that you'd use! Certainly a good excuse to buy quality bubble bath!

I'll try the scent and the visualiztion technique next time I get a craving!
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Old 05-19-2010, 11:24 AM   #6  
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Quote:
Originally Posted by saef View Post
Also I think advertisers exploit this tendency by putting food into our minds that we'd never think to eat, except they have already embedded the image there for us to find when we get in this mood.
I've definitely experienced this. When I moved to North Carolina, started watching some NASCAR races on television. I wouldn't have thought I was paying that much attention to them but one day found myself buying cornflakes at the grocery store. I don't think I'd eaten them since I was a kid and wondered what made me reach for them. The next Sunday I realized there was a Kelloggs Cornflakes car that I was seeing go round and round the track for hours...
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