11.1 | Hunger and Eating Flashcards Preview

🚫 PSY100H1: Introduction to Psychology (Winter 2016) with J. Vervaeke > 11.1 | Hunger and Eating > Flashcards

Flashcards in 11.1 | Hunger and Eating Deck (10)
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1
Q

Motivation

A
  • motivation: the physiological and psychological processes underlying the initiation of behaviours that direct organisms toward specific goals
  • includes the physiological and psychological processes underlying the initiation of behaviours that direct organisms toward specific goals
2
Q

Drive

A
  • drive: a biological trigger that tells us we may be deprived so something and causes us to seek out what is needed such as food and water
  • when a drive is satisfied, reward centers in our brains become activated and reinforces our behaviour
3
Q

Homeostasis

A
  • homeostasis: the body’s physiological processes that allow it to maintain consistent internal states in response to the outer environment
4
Q

Allostasis

A
  • allostasis: motivation is not only influenced by current needs, but also the anticipation of future needs
  • e.g. eating a lot of food when anxious
5
Q

Physiological Aspects of Hunger

A
  • cause can be found in the hypothalamus; a set of “on” and “off” switches on the bottom surface of the brain
  • glucose: a sugar that serves as a primary energy source for the brain and the rest of the body
  • when glucose levels are too low, the hypothalamus detects this which causes hunger
  • insulin stores glucose, which lowers glucose levels and the cycle begins again
  • satiation: the point in a meal when we’re no longer motivated to eat
6
Q

Psychological Aspects of Hunger

A
  • humans learned that the best strategy was to “eat while you can” because there was no guarantee that another meal would be coming any time soon
  • over the course of evolution, our bodies responded to this need with a number of systems that made the consumption of high-energy foods pleasurable
  • we crave fats because we have specialized receptors on the tongue that are sensitive to the fat content of food
  • sugar and some addictive drugs can stimulate release of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens, a brain region associated with reinforcing effects of amphetamines and cocaine; sugar can be addictive
  • we stress eat because the principle of allostatsis causes us to forsee a stressful event in the future, so it’s better if we prepare now
7
Q

Attention and Eating

A
  • unit bias: the tendency to assume that the unit of sale or portioning is an appropriate amount to consume
  • e.g. the bottomless bowl of soup; participants who ate 70% more than the control group didn’t report feeling more satiated
  • e.g. the stale popcorn experiment; those with the large bags ate more, even if the popcorn tasted like cardboard
8
Q

Eating and the Social Context

A
  • whether the presence of other people increases or decreases our motivation to eat is influenced by the social situation
  • social facilitation (eating more): dinner hosts encourage guests to take several helpings; as well, the longer a person sits socializing the more like they are to continue eating
  • impression management (eating less): self-conciously controlling behaviour so that others will see them in a certain way; e.g. chewing with your mouth closed is polite
    • minimal eating norm: a social norm indicating that eating smaller portions is more polite
  • modelling (eating whatever they eat): e.g. being at a company dinner and not eating too much, then hanging out with your friends and eating a ton even though you’re full
9
Q

Obesity

A
  • obesity: a disorder of positive energy balance, in which energy intake exceeds energy expenditure

reasons obesity rates are so high:

  • the huge variety of foods available
  • we still crave fatty foods due to our evolutionary needs, but nowadays there aren’t long periods of time where people go hungry
  • the poor are more heavily affected because cheap foods tend to be unhealthy
10
Q

Anorexia and Bulimia

A
  • anorexia nervosa: an eating disorder that involves (1) self-starvation, (2) intense fear of weight gain and dissatisfaction with one’s body, and (3) a denial of the serious consequences of severely low weight
  • bulimia nervosa: an eating disorder that is characterized by periods of food deprivation, binge-eating, and purging
  • bulimia tends to be impulsive, whereas anorexia is not
  • bulimics tend to find their cyclical patterns disturbing, whereas anorexics seen indifferent to their behaviour
  • the most common reason eating disorders develop is stress, and a perceivied loss of control
  • those with eating disorders also tend to feel depressed, guilty, have low self-esteem, perfectionism, and/or suppressed anger
  • repreoduction suppression hypothesis: females who believe they have low levels of social support from romantic partners and family members are more likely to engage in dieting behaviour; this change in food intake can influence ovulation
  • both men and women develop eating disorders

Decks in 🚫 PSY100H1: Introduction to Psychology (Winter 2016) with J. Vervaeke Class (50):