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Explicit emotional information processing: emotion recognition
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Baldaro et al. (1996)
| Children Males and Females (Age: 8–16 years) Groups: Developmental obesity group (BMI: 10/30% more than the correct weight, n = 20) Normal weight group (BMI: correct weight, n = 20) | 42 photos of seven facial expressions: Anger Sadness, Disgust, Surprise, Fear, Happiness and Neutral | Number of emotion recognition errors: total and by emotion facial expressions | Obesity group: Higher total recognition errors Higher recognition errors of happiness and neutral facial expressions |
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Koch and Pollatos (2015)
| Children Males and Females (Age: 6–10 years) Groups: Overweight/Obesity group (mean BMI = 22.61, > 90th BMI percentile, based on the national reference data for German children; n = 33) Normal weight group (mean BMI = 16.23, ≥ 25th to ≤ 75th BMI percentile, based on the national reference data for German children; n = 33) | 20 photos of four facial expressions: Happiness, Anger, Sadness, and Neutral | Hit rate (%): total and by emotion facial expressions Reaction time: total and by emotion facial expressions | Overweight/Obesity group: Lower total hit rate Increased total reaction time |
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Percinel et al. (2018)
| Children and adolescents Males and Females (Age: 11–18) Groups: Obesity group (mean BMI = 34, > 95th BMI percentile, based on reference for Turkish children; n = 30) Normal weight group (mean BMI = 20.3, ≥ 25th to ≤ 75th BMI percentile based on reference for Turkish children; n = 30) | Faces test: 60 photos of six facial expressions: Happiness, Sadness, Surprise, Anger, Disgust, and Fear | Total correct recognition answers | Obesity group: Lower total correct recognition answers |
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Turan et al. (2019)
| Adolescents Males and Females (Age range not reported) Groups: Obesity + BED group: (mean BMI = 34.58, >95th BMI percentile, reference was not mentioned; n = 32) Obesity non-BED group: (mean BMI = 32.72, > 95th BMI percentile, reference was not mentioned; n = 32) Normal weight group: (mean BMI = 20, ≥ 3rd to ≤ 85th BMI percentile, reference was not mentioned; n = 64) | Faces test: 18 photos of six facial expressions: Happiness, Sadness, Surprise, Anger, Disgust, and Fear | Total correct recognition answers | Obesity groups: Lower total correct recognition answers irrespective of their BED status |
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Bergmann et al. (2016)
| Adults Females (Age range not reported) Groups: Obesity group (BMI ≥ 30; n = 73). Normal weight group (BMI ≤ 24.9; n = 73) | 42 photos of eight facial expressions: Anger, Sadness, Disgust, Surprise, Fear, Happiness, Contempt, and Neutral | Total correct recognition answers | No differences between obesity and normal weight groups |
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Surcinelli et al. (2007)
| Preadolescents and adolescents Males and Females (mean age: 12.3 years) Groups: Obesity group (BMI: boys scored between 1.63 and 2.45 standard deviations and girls between 1.74 and 2.64 standard deviations from the 50th percentile of the population of Italian children; n = 30) Normal weight group (BMI: boys scored between -1.10 and 0.54 standard deviations and girls scored between -1.27 and 1.08 standard deviations from the 50th percentile of the population of Italian children; n = 30) | 42 photos of seven facial expressions: Anger, Sadness, Disgust, Surprise, Fear, Happiness, and Neutral | Total correct recognition answers | No differences between obesity and normal weight groups |
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Explicit emotional information processing: emotional experience
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Rommel et al. (2012)
| Adults Women (Age range not reported). Obesity group (mean BMI = 39.16; n = 94). Normal weight group (mean BMI = 22.61; n = 56) | Levels of Emotional Awareness Scale (LEAS) | LEAS total score LEAS Self LEAS others | Obesity group: Attenuation of emotional experience expressed as lower scores in three subscales of LEAS |
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Surcinelli et al. (2007)
| Described above | Levels of Emotional Awareness Scale (LEAS) | LEAS total score | Obesity group: Attenuation of emotional experience expressed as lower LEAS total score |
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Giel et al. (2016)
| Adults (Age range no reported) Study 1 Women Groups: Obesity group (mean BMI = 43.2; n = 33) Normal weight group (mean BMI = 21.3; n = 25) Study 2 Men Groups: Obesity group (mean BMI = 37.4; n = 29). Normal weight group (mean BMI = 24.1; n = 29) | Emotional perception task: Pictures from the International Affective Picture System (IAPS) of six emotional conditions (fear, anger, sadness, happiness, fear-anger, fear-sadness). The subject have to rate each picture in three dimensions: valence, arousal and dominance | Ratings of valence, arousal and dominance of each emotional condition | Obesity group: Attenuation in emotional experience expressed as lower values in arousal and dominance in emotional conditions |
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Implicit emotional information processing: Sensory unawareness
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Cserjési et al. (2011)
| Adults Females (Age range not reported) Groups: Obesity group (mean BMI = 34.2; n = 30) Normal weight group (mean BMI = 22.8; n = 30) | Affective priming task: Stimuli: Prime: schematic emotional faces (happy, neutral, sad, angry) Target: positive and negative adjectives Conditions: Affectively congruent (prime/target): +/+ or -/- Affectively incongruent (prime/target): ± or -/+ | Affective priming effect (significant difference between facilitation and inhibition effect) | Obesity group: Attenuation in the processing of sad and angry faces expressed as no priming effect |
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Wegener et al. (2008)
| Adults Men and Women (Age range not reported) Groups: Obesity group (mean BMI = 38.5; n = 30) Normal weight group (mean BMI = 23.4; n = 25) | Affective priming task: Stimuli: Prime: Words with positive and negative connotations Target: Words with positive and negative connotations Conditions: Affectively congruent (prime/target): +/+ or -/- Affectively incongruent (prime/target): ± or -/+ | Affective priming effect (difference in error rates of target classification between congruent and incongruent conditions) | Obesity group: Attenuation in the automatic affective processing expressed as a smaller affective priming effect |
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Implicit emotional information processing: Attentional unawareness
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Hanson et al. (2020)
| Adult U.S. Soldiers Men and Women (Age: 19–50) Groups: Obesity group (BMI = 30; n = 29) Normal weight group (BMI = 29.99; 80) | Emotional Stroop: series of words of various colors appeared on a screen, the subject must to tapping the color of the word instead of reading the word Stimuli: combat-related words (negative valence) | Number of correct answers | Obesity group: Difficulties to inhibit automatic processing of negative affective information expressed as lower number of correct answers |
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Scarpina et al. (2021)
| Adults Women (Age range not reported). Groups: Obesity group (mean BMI = 43.79, BMI > 30; n = 20) Normal weight group (mean BMI = 22.17, BMI > 18.5 < 24.9; n = 20) | Redundant target task: individuals generally respond faster when two identical targets are presented simultaneously rather than when presented alone; moreover, the competitive presence of a distractor (that is another emotion or a neutral expression) affects the correct recognition of the target Stimuli: photos of facial expressions of anger, fear and neutral, presented in four conditions: (1) Single: the target (i.e., the face expressing the target emotion) was presented on the right OR left of a fixation cross (2) Congruent: the target was presented simultaneously on the right AND left of the fixation cross (3) Emotional incongruent: the target was presented on the right OR left of the fixation cross along with a different emotion (4) Neutral incongruent: the target was presented on the right OR left of the fixation cross along with a neutral expression | Accuracy Reaction time | Obesity group: Facilitated automatic processing of anger Difficulties in automatic processing of fearful faces |