No counterregulation after breaking the external restraint of children. |
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Authors: | A Jansen J van den Berg K Bulten |
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Affiliation: | Department of Mental Health Sciences/Experimental Psychopathology, Limburg University, Maastricht, The Netherlands. |
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Abstract: | At the present, it is unknown how restraint and binge eating/counterregulation are exactly related. Earlier studies on this relationship suffer from two main shortcomings: the studies are all correlational in nature or could not rule out the contribution of confounding variables such as weight loss. The present study investigated whether a break of restraint is a sufficient condition for the occurrence of counterregulation by studying a restrained sample which is not liable to dieting practices and weight loss. The externally imposed restraint on children with regard to eating sweets was broken. However, after breaking their external restraint the children did not counterregulate. It is discussed whether restraint of food intake is really as important for binge eating as it is claimed to be or whether it is merely a consequence or an epiphenomenon of binge eating. |
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