| Literature DB >> 31798937 |
Abstract
Integrating research on elementary eating behaviors, savoring, mental imagery, mindfulness, cooking, and dinner rituals, a psychological theory of moderate eating is formulated that does not require effortful self-control and giving up on the pleasures of eating. The theory proposes that taste and pleasure can be combined with a relatively objective attitude toward food, resulting in a relatively slow, gentle, and thoughtful manner of eating that enhances satiation. The objective food attitude is thought to result from (a) the accumulation of multiple sensorimotor expectancies and perspectives and (b) a motivational mechanism underlying prosocial behavior, food sharing, and aggression-inhibiting dinner rituals.Entities:
Keywords: authenticity; consciousness; cooking; dinner rituals; mindfulness; savoring; self-regulation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31798937 PMCID: PMC6873279 DOI: 10.1177/2055102919889883
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Psychol Open ISSN: 2055-1029
Figure 1.Highly simplified neural network showing competition and cooperation among different motivational systems involved in eating behavior. (The network does not take into account expected outcomes, feedback, and learning.) Explanation in text.
Figure 2.A model of moderate eating depicting relationships between the fundamental psychological concepts of (object) perception, motivation, and behavior (explanation in text).