Restrained Eating and Memory Specificity
Overview
Social Sciences
Affiliations
Autobiographical memories are personal experiences that we store across our life-span. A reduced ability to retrieve specific autobiographical experiences has been reported for a number of clinical populations. Previous research has found that the size of the memory specificity effect can predict disorder occurrence, severity, and treatment success. The current research examined whether a similar relationship could be found between memory specificity and restrained eating in a female college student population. Participants retrieved autobiographical memories that related to cue-words associated with dieting and body image. Individual differences in restrained eating were measured with the Restraint Scale (RS). Participants who scored higher on the concern-with-dieting sub-scale of the RS retrieved fewer specific autobiographical memories regardless of their current dieting activity. The memory specificity effect has the potential to serve as a predictor of eating disorder occurrence and treatment success, and may also assist with the development of interventions targeting such disorders.
Wallis D, Moss J, Varnam B, Dritschel B, Ridout N Eat Weight Disord. 2023; 28(1):53.
PMID: 37341829 PMC: 10284726. DOI: 10.1007/s40519-023-01577-w.
Verbal emotional expressiveness in women with eating disorders: recalling autobiographical memories.
Pinto R, Goncalves S, Saraiva J, Albuquerque P Eat Weight Disord. 2018; 24(5):915-922.
PMID: 30382541 DOI: 10.1007/s40519-018-0604-0.
Restrained Eating and Food Cues: Recent Findings and Conclusions.
Polivy J, Herman C Curr Obes Rep. 2017; 6(1):79-85.
PMID: 28205156 DOI: 10.1007/s13679-017-0243-1.