Obese women show greater delay discounting than healthy-weight women.
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Psychological treatments for binge eating disorderFood Decision-Making: Effects of Weight Status and AgeUnhealthy diets, obesity and time discounting: a systematic literature review and network analysisObesity and the neurocognitive basis of food reward and the control of intakeQuantifying reinforcement value and demand for psychoactive substances in humansAre executive function and impulsivity antipodes? A conceptual reconstruction with special reference to addictionObesity and addiction: neurobiological overlapsFood reward in the obese and after weight loss induced by calorie restriction and bariatric surgeryHaloperidol and rimonabant increase delay discounting in rats fed high-fat and standard-chow diets.Reinforcement pathology and obesityMaking Time for Nature: Visual Exposure to Natural Environments Lengthens Subjective Time Perception and Reduces ImpulsivityNeurobehavioural correlates of body mass index and eating behaviours in adults: a systematic review.The neural correlates of temporal reward discounting.Complementary cognitive capabilities, economic decision making, and aging.Women who are motivated to eat and discount the future are more obese.The behavioral economics and neuroeconomics of reinforcer pathologies: implications for etiology and treatment of addiction.Hypothetical intertemporal choice and real economic behavior: delay discounting predicts voucher redemptions during contingency-management procedures.The future is now: reducing impulsivity and energy intake using episodic future thinkingP300 and the stroop effect in overweight minority adolescents.Impulsive social influence increases impulsive choices on a temporal discounting task in young adults.Time to tighten the belts? Exploring the relationship between savings and obesity.Do the adjusting-delay and increasing-delay tasks measure the same construct: delay discounting?Accurate characterization of delay discounting: a multiple model approach using approximate Bayesian model selection and a unified discounting measure.Statistical equivalence and test-retest reliability of delay and probability discounting using real and hypothetical rewards.Obesity and its relationship to addictions: is overeating a form of addictive behavior?Reward, dopamine and the control of food intake: implications for obesity.Human cognitive function and the obesogenic environment.Errors affect hypothetical intertemporal food choice in womenThe future is now: comparing the effect of episodic future thinking on impulsivity in lean and obese individuals.Training Tolerance to Delay Using the Escalating Interest TaskBody weight status, eating behavior, sensitivity to reward/punishment, and gender: relationships and interdependencies.Impulsive choice and altruistic punishment are correlated and increase in tandem with serotonin depletionRobust relation between temporal discounting rates and body mass.Remember the future: working memory training decreases delay discounting among stimulant addicts.Mechanisms of impulsive choice: I. Individual differences in interval timing and reward processingDelay discounting moderates the effect of food reinforcement on energy intake among non-obese womenDysregulation in level of goal and action identification across psychological disorders.Can't wait to lose weight? Characterizing temporal discounting parameters for weight-lossFood reinforcement and delay discounting in zBMI-discordant siblingsINTERTEMPORAL DECISION-MAKING FOR A GROUP
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P2860
Obese women show greater delay discounting than healthy-weight women.
description
2008 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2008年の論文
@ja
2008年学术文章
@wuu
2008年学术文章
@zh
2008年学术文章
@zh-cn
2008年学术文章
@zh-hans
2008年学术文章
@zh-my
2008年学术文章
@zh-sg
2008年學術文章
@yue
2008年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Obese women show greater delay discounting than healthy-weight women.
@en
Obese women show greater delay discounting than healthy-weight women.
@nl
type
label
Obese women show greater delay discounting than healthy-weight women.
@en
Obese women show greater delay discounting than healthy-weight women.
@nl
prefLabel
Obese women show greater delay discounting than healthy-weight women.
@en
Obese women show greater delay discounting than healthy-weight women.
@nl
P2093
P1433
P1476
Obese women show greater delay discounting than healthy-weight women.
@en
P2093
Edwin W Cook
James E Cox
Kathy B Avsar
Rosalyn E Weller
P304
P356
10.1016/J.APPET.2008.04.010
P577
2008-04-18T00:00:00Z