| Literature DB >> 26402043 |
Yan Wang1, Lei Wang2, Xianghua Cui2, Yuan Fang2, Qianqiu Chen2, Ya Wang2, Yao Qiang2.
Abstract
Self-regulatory resources and trait self-control have been found to moderate the impulse-behavior relationship. The current study investigated whether the interaction of self-regulatory resources and trait self-control moderates the association between implicit attitudes and food consumption. One hundred twenty female participants were randomly assigned to either a depletion condition in which their self-regulatory resources were reduced or a no-depletion condition. Participants' implicit attitudes for chocolate were measured with the Single Category Implicit Association Test and self-report measures of trait self-control were collected. The dependent variable was chocolate consumption in an ostensible taste and rate task. Implicit attitudes predicted chocolate consumption in depleted participants but not in non-depleted participants. However, this predictive power of implicit attitudes on eating in depleted condition disappeared in participants with high trait self-control. Thus, trait self-control and self-regulatory resources interact to moderate the prediction of implicit attitude on eating behavior. Results suggest that high trait self-control buffers the effect of self-regulatory depletion on impulsive eating.Entities:
Keywords: Ego depletion; Food consumption; Implicit attitudes; Self-regulatory resources; Trait self-control
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26402043 DOI: 10.1016/j.eatbeh.2015.09.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eat Behav ISSN: 1471-0153