TY - JOUR
T1 - I smell it, I (do not) want it - the influence of food odor on inhibition in restrained and non-restrained eaters
AU - Berebbi, Shir
AU - Seror, Yuval
AU - Kalanthroff, Eyal
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2025/6
Y1 - 2025/6
N2 - We are constantly surrounded by many food cues that can influence our eating behaviors, both consciously and nonconsciously. Previous research showed that exposure to food cues leads to decreased inhibition in non-restrained eaters and increased inhibition in restrained eaters. However, these studies were solely conducted using the visual domain, using images of food as food cues. Unlike the visual system, the olfactory system is less controlled, and its effect is less accessible to conscious awareness. Therefore, the current study investigated whether the effect of food cues on inhibition extends to the olfactory modality. Fifty-two females, 26 restrained and 26 non-restrained eaters completed two blocks of the stop-signal task: one while being primed with food odor (caramel extract) and one with no odor. The non-restrained group exhibited poorer inhibition when primed with a food odor compared to the no-odor condition. In contrast, the restrained eaters group showed greater inhibition when primed with a food odor compared to the no-odor condition. Our results replicated previous studies that used visual food stimuli but extended the literature by showing that the association between food cues and inhibition in restrained eaters is strong, automatic, and potentially exists at the nonconscious level.
AB - We are constantly surrounded by many food cues that can influence our eating behaviors, both consciously and nonconsciously. Previous research showed that exposure to food cues leads to decreased inhibition in non-restrained eaters and increased inhibition in restrained eaters. However, these studies were solely conducted using the visual domain, using images of food as food cues. Unlike the visual system, the olfactory system is less controlled, and its effect is less accessible to conscious awareness. Therefore, the current study investigated whether the effect of food cues on inhibition extends to the olfactory modality. Fifty-two females, 26 restrained and 26 non-restrained eaters completed two blocks of the stop-signal task: one while being primed with food odor (caramel extract) and one with no odor. The non-restrained group exhibited poorer inhibition when primed with a food odor compared to the no-odor condition. In contrast, the restrained eaters group showed greater inhibition when primed with a food odor compared to the no-odor condition. Our results replicated previous studies that used visual food stimuli but extended the literature by showing that the association between food cues and inhibition in restrained eaters is strong, automatic, and potentially exists at the nonconscious level.
KW - Inhibition
KW - Inhibitory control
KW - Odor
KW - Olfactory
KW - Restrained eaters
KW - Stop-signal task
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85217946932&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.foodqual.2025.105470
DO - 10.1016/j.foodqual.2025.105470
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AN - SCOPUS:85217946932
SN - 0950-3293
VL - 127
JO - Food Quality and Preference
JF - Food Quality and Preference
M1 - 105470
ER -