Overweight and Obese Women Are Equally Capable of the Impulse Control That Lean Women Exhibit
Dieters call it willpower; social scientists call it delayed gratification.
It’s the ability to delay an immediate reward in favor of a bigger
future reward, for example, having a slimmer body in a few months versus
the hot fudge sundae now. Previous studies have shown that overweight
and obese people have a harder time delaying gratification, so they are
more likely to fore go the healthy body later on in favor of eating more
calorie-dense foods now.
But University at Buffalo research recently published in the journal Appetite
now shows that behavioral interventions that improve delay of
gratification can work just as well with overweight and obese women as
with lean women.
“This research is certainly welcome news for people who have
struggled to lose weight, because it shows that when people are taught
to imagine, or simulate the future, they can improve their ability to
delay gratification,” says renowned obesity expert, Leonard H. Epstein,
PhD, SUNY Distinguished Professor in the UB School of Medicine and
Biomedical Sciences, who was senior author on the research.
The research is part of a field called prospection, the process by
which people can project themselves into the future, by mentally
simulating future events.
Some of the most famous research done on delay of gratification
includes experiments done at Stanford University in the 1960s and 1970s,
where children were given an opportunity to either eat a single snack,
such as a marshmallow now, or, if they waited a period of time, they
could be rewarded with multiple snacks. Follow-up studies found that in
general, those who were able to wait were more responsible and
successful in their adult lives.
Epstein notes that many people have difficulty resisting the impulse
for immediate gratification. Instead, they do something called delay
discounting, in which they discount future rewards in favor of smaller,
immediate rewards. This tendency is associated with greater consumption
of highly caloric, ready-to-eat foods. It has been speculated that if
people could modify delay discounting, they would be more successful at
losing weight.
“Now we have developed a treatment for this,” says Epstein. “We can
teach people how to reduce delay discounting, where they learn how to
mentally simulate the future in order to moderate their behavior in the
present.”
The UB researchers evaluated how much delay discounting participants
engaged in using a hypothetical test that promised different amounts of
money available either now or in the future. While the amount available
in the future remained $100, the amount available immediately decreased
during each test, eventually falling as low as $1.
Participants were then asked to think about future events that would
occur during the time periods involved in the monetary test. So if they
were choosing between $95 now and $100 in six months, they would be
instructed to think about the most vivid event that would be happening
to them six months from now, for example, a birthday party.
A control group was asked, instead, to think during the monetary test of vivid scenes from a Pinocchio story they had read.
The UB researchers found that those who engaged in the future
thinking exercise were able to reduce delay discounting and that there
were few differences between the lean and the overweight and obese
women.
The study looked at 24 lean women and 24 overweight and obese women,
all of whom underwent several behavioral assessments to determine
differences in each person’s motivation level, their perspective on time
and how much they sought out fun and responded to rewards.
In a study published earlier this year, Epstein and his colleagues demonstrated that overweight and obese women ate less when they were imagining themselves in enjoyable future scenarios and reduced their inclination to engage in delay discounting.
In a study published earlier this year, Epstein and his colleagues demonstrated that overweight and obese women ate less when they were imagining themselves in enjoyable future scenarios and reduced their inclination to engage in delay discounting.
“In the current study, we show that episodic future thinking works
equally well in overweight and obese women in comparison to lean women,”
says Epstein. “That’s important since several studies have shown that
overweight/obese women are more impulsive. The fact that projecting
oneself into the future and imagining future scenarios works equally
well for lean and overweight/obese women is important for designing
interventions to reduce impulsive decision making in women who need to
lose weight.”
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