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Some questions for you to answer:

Some questions for you to answer:. How many times a day do you normally eat ? Why? At what time do you normally eat? Why? List three food products you really hate: Why? List three food products you really love: Why?. More q’s…. 9. Are you happy with the way your body looks? 10. Why?

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Some questions for you to answer:

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  1. Some questions for you to answer: • How many times a day do you normally eat ? • Why? • At what time do you normally eat? • Why? • List three food products you really hate: • Why? • List three food products you really love: • Why?

  2. More q’s… 9. Are you happy with the way your body looks? 10. Why? 11. Does food or eating influence how you look or feel about your body? 12. Why? 12a. Final Q: What influences how much you eat? Prader-Willi syndrome

  3. Attitudes to Food. • LO: To understand that eating behaviour such as • food preference • portion size3 • Eating motivation • Body dissatisfaction Can be moderated by parental attitudes, mood and cultural influences.

  4. Prader-Willi Syndrome • Is associated with an insatiable appetite, resulting in morbid obesity. An abnormality of Chromo’ 15 disrupts the normal functioning of the hypothalamus, which amongst other things controls appetite (hunger> full-up/not full-up) Miranda‎'s "La monstrua desnuda" (The Nude Monster) 1680 So is our eating behaviour truly under our control? Is it genetic? Is it influenced by parents/ media? What psychological factors effect when and what we eat?

  5. Factors that might influence your eating behaviour (food choice)... • Hunger • Attitudes/Beliefs/Knowledge • Social Context/Economics • Parents/Peers • Mood What is the dynamic behind each of these influences? Biological – Cognitive – Behavioural (Learning Theory)

  6. Social Learning (AO1) • Bandura and SLT (you should already know this!) • Three sources to ‘model’ eating from: • Parents • Peers • Media Task: Briefly outline Bandura’sSLT. How could you apply this theory to eating behaviour. Give examples.

  7. Snack food intake, eating motivation and body dissatisfaction have all been associated to parents attitudes and behaviours (Brown and Ogden, 2004) A daughters eating can be predicted based on her mothers diet restraint and her concerns of her daughter being overweight (Birch and Fisher, 2000) Who does the shopping in your household? If you had a choice would you eat the same as your parents? Would you eat healthier? More or Less? Parental Influences Eating Behaviour 1

  8. PEER INFLUENCES Positive correlations found between peer influence and disordered eating amoungst 10-12yr olds. (Meyer and Gast, 2008) Peer Influences Eating Behaviour 1

  9. Media do have a massive impact on what people eat and the attitudes we have to certain foods. However individual circumstances such as age, income and family situation also has a major influence. Thus we know what we should be eating, but perhaps go for cheaper unhealthier options. Media Influences What is reductionist about using only the SLT approach to explain eating behaviours and food preference? Eating Behaviour 1

  10. Social Learning (AO2) Evaluate Social Learning : • Research which supports eg. Meyer & Gast (2008) ‘correlation between parental influence and disordered eating’ and Birch & Fisher (2000) ‘mother’s diet predicts daughter’s’ • However comment on ‘gender bias’* and over reliance by SLT on ‘fashion’ to the exclusion of other factors eg. Evolution & Adaption • Plus general evaluation of SLT (+/-):theory based on childhood aggression etc *Next slide

  11. Ethnicity: White women more likely to have greater levels of body dissatisfaction then black or Asian. The acculturation effect was found studying 14000, women in Australia, for all ethnic groups the longer the amount of time spent in the country increased body dissatisfaction However, not all research agrees with this, as Mumfed (1991) found that bulimia was more prevelant amongst Asian girls, and Strigel –Moore found a drive for thinness amongst black girls more then white. What about eating preference? Blue box Rozin (1999) Cultural Influences Eating Behaviour 1

  12. Income is positively correlated with healthy eating (2003 Scottish health survey) However the link between social class and body dissatisfaction and disordered eating is far more tenuous. Dornbusch (1984) found with a large sample of 7000 American adolescents the higher the class, the greater the desire to be thin and engage in dieting behaviour. However Storey (1995) found that higher class individuals were more satisfied with their weight and engaged in less weight control behaviours. Social Class Eating Behaviour 1

  13. Low mood and comfort eating Summarise Garg yellow box (2007) study. Both clinical (bulimic) and sub clinical (below threshold) populations exhibit high levels of anxiety prior to binge eating. Wegner (2002) had students record their mood and eating behaviours in a diary over two weeks. Prior to a binge session students reported levels of low mood, compared to non-binge days. However the binge did not lift the mood of the individuals. Then why do it? In fact studies report a further drop in mood following from the binge What about our friend chocolate? Read Parker study (2006) Mood Eating Behaviour 1

  14. Social Learning (AO2) Evaluate Social Learning (p79): • Research which supports eg. Meyer & Gast (2008) ‘correlation between parental influence and disordered eating’ and Birch & Fisher (2000) ‘mother’s diet predicts daughter’s’ • However comment on ‘gender bias’* and over reliance by SLT on ‘fashion’ to the exclusion of other factors eg. Evolution & Adaption • Plus general evaluation of SLT (+/-):theory based on childhood aggression etc *Next slide

  15. Gender Bias: Is it female only? • Q) Which discrete group of males has the same incidence of ED’s as females? • Gender difference on value of body image:

  16. Problems of Generalisability • What is the difference between a clinical and a subclinical population? Eating Behaviour 1

  17. Next… • Explanations for the success and failure of dieting

  18. Why and what…. Dieting 18 Dieting • The main cause is perceived body image dissatisfaction (dismorphia) • Majority of dieters are women, as many as 87% of all women have dieted as some time in their lives (Furnham and Greaves, 1994) • 3 basic forms: • Restricting the total amount of food eaten • Refraining from eating certain types of food • Avoiding eating for long periods of time

  19. Dieting: support and encouragement 19 Dieting Eating is often part of social interaction. So informing friends and family of weight loss goals should help reduce the temptations of food and encourage positive reinforcement (and punishment) from others Lots of dieters also join a weight loss group or diet with a friend or partner to maintain motivation But this approach doesn’t work for everyone – some people find constant monitoring by others stressful and use secretive binge eating as a defence mechanism

  20. Physiological Changes Due to Dieting 20 Dieting Your body has evolved to cope with chronic food shortages by lowering your metabolic rate and protecting fat stores in times of starvation; extreme dieting triggers this response If you then return to normal eating you end up with more excess calories than before which are then converted to fat; to overcome the feeling of deprivation during the diet people often also overeat afterwards, which gives an even bigger weight gain You may than start another, ever more restrictive diet to undo the weight gain, but this will just reduce the metabolic rate further and so the pattern of ‘yo-yo’ dieting continues

  21. Restraint Theory: Ogden (2007) 21 Dieting Argues that restrained eating can lead to both under and overeating post-diet The boundary model (post-diet increased range)

  22. Restraint Theory – a classic experiment 22 Dieting Pre-load (snack-up before)/taste (eat after) test paradigm Participants are given (the ‘pre-load’) either high-calorie snacks or a low-calorie snacks After eating, they are told they are going to take part in a taste preference test The key factor – how much of the taste test food they actually eat (loads of food placed in front of them and the amount is measured)

  23. Results... 23 Dieting The results suggest that although dieters may eat less at some times, restrained eating is also associated with eating more at other times and this factor may explain why dieters are often unsuccessful (Odgen, 2003)

  24. Expand notes:

  25. Assignment 1 1. Discuss/evaluate attitudes to eating / food and explanations for the success or failure of dieting (25 marks) Instructions: The essay style answer should have an Introduction (introduce/define). Then AO1 (9 marks) and AO2/3 (16 marks) as sub-headed sections followed by a short conclusion (summary). You WILL need to focus on AO2/3 (check ‘commentary’ and chapter summary pp 94-95 textbook). (500/600 words).

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