| Literature DB >> 24979216 |
Elissa S Epel1, A Janet Tomiyama2, Ashley E Mason3, Barbara A Laraia4, William Hartman5, Karen Ready5, Michael Acree3, Tanja C Adam6, Sachiko St Jeor7, David Kessler8.
Abstract
Why are some individuals more vulnerable to persistent weight gain and obesity than are others? Some obese individuals report factors that drive overeating, including lack of control, lack of satiation, and preoccupation with food, which may stem from reward-related neural circuitry. These are normative and common symptoms and not the sole focus of any existing measures. Many eating scales capture these common behaviors, but are confounded with aspects of dysregulated eating such as binge eating or emotional overeating. Across five studies, we developed items that capture this reward-based eating drive (RED). Study 1 developed the items in lean to obese individuals (n = 327) and examined changes in weight over eight years. In Study 2, the scale was further developed and expert raters evaluated the set of items. Study 3 tested psychometric properties of the final 9 items in 400 participants. Study 4 examined psychometric properties and race invariance (n = 80 women). Study 5 examined psychometric properties and age/gender invariance (n = 381). Results showed that RED scores correlated with BMI and predicted earlier onset of obesity, greater weight fluctuations, and greater overall weight gain over eight years. Expert ratings of RED scale items indicated that the items reflected characteristics of reward-based eating. The RED scale evidenced high internal consistency and invariance across demographic factors. The RED scale, designed to tap vulnerability to reward-based eating behavior, appears to be a useful brief tool for identifying those at higher risk of weight gain over time. Given the heterogeneity of obesity, unique brief profiling of the reward-based aspect of obesity using a self-report instrument such as the RED scale may be critical for customizing effective treatments in the general population.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24979216 PMCID: PMC4076308 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0101350
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Items comprising the Reward-Based Eating Drive Scale.
| Item | Complaint | Source |
|
| 1. I feel out of control in the presence of delicious food. | Lack of Control | Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire | .82 |
| 2. When I start eating, I just can’t seem to stop. | Lack of Control | Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire | .84 |
| 3. It is difficult for me to leave food on my plate. | Lack of Control | Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire | .64 |
| 4. When it comes to foods I love, I have no willpower. | Lack of Control |
| . |
| 5. I get so hungry that my stomach often seems like a bottomless pit. | Lack of Satiation | Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire | .71 |
| 6. I don’t get full easily. | Lack of Satiation |
| .64 |
| 7. It seems like most of my waking hours are preoccupied by thoughtsabout eating or not eating. | Preoccupation with Food | Binge Eating Scale | .81 |
| 8. I have days when I can’t seem to think about anything else but food. | Preoccupation with Food | Binge Eating Scale | .84 |
| 9. Food is always on my mind. | Preoccupation with Food |
| .83 |
Note: One item, “Others may slow down when eating, but I tend to eat fast until I am done” was deleted due to low expert ratings.