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Pupillary dilation response to the auditory food words in adolescents with obesity without binge eating disorder. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Childhood obesity is increasingly recognized as a significant global health issue, with environmental influences playing a role in its development.
  • A study involving 63 adolescents examined pupillary responses to auditory food vs. nonfood words, using a remote eye-tracking device to measure changes in pupil size.
  • Results showed that healthy-weight adolescents exhibited greater pupil dilation to food words compared to those with obesity, who had a similar response to both food and nonfood cues; this suggests the need to explore psychological factors affecting these responses in future research.

Article Abstract

Childhood obesity is a growing global public health problem. Studies suggest that environmental cues contribute to developing and maintaining obesity. We aimed to evaluate pupillary changes to auditory food words vs. nonfood words and to conduct a dynamic temporal analysis of pupil size changes in adolescents with obesity without binge eating disorder by comparing healthy-weight adolescents. In this study, a total of 63 adolescents aged 12-18 years (n = 32, obesity group (OG); n = 31, control group (CG)) were included. In an auditory paradigm, participants were presented with a series of high and low-calorie food and nonfood words. A binocular remote eye-tracking device was used to measure pupil diameter. Generalized additive mixed models (GAMMs) were used for dynamic temporal analysis of pupillometry data. The results of GAMM analysis indicated that CG had larger pupil dilation than the OG while listening to auditory food words. CG had larger pupil dilation in food words than in nonfood words. However, the OG had a similar pupillary response in food and nonfood words. Pupil dilation response to higher-calorie foods was extended over the later stages of the time period (after 2000 ms) in the OG. In summary, our findings indicated that individuals with obesity had lower pupil dilation to auditory food words compared to normal-weight peers. Adolescents with obesity had prolonged pupillary dilation in higher calories of food words. The individual psychological factors affecting the dynamic changes of pupil responses to food cues in adolescents with obesity should be examined in further studies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsycho.2024.108874DOI Listing

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