Eaten up by boredom: consuming food to escape awareness of the bored self
Eaten up by boredom: consuming food to escape awareness of the bored self
Research indicates that being bored affectively marks an appraised lack of meaning in the present situation and in life. We propose that state boredom increases eating in an attempt to distract from this experience, especially among people high in objective self-awareness. Three studies were conducted to investigate boredom’s effects on eating, both naturally occurring in a diary study and manipulated in two experiments. In Study 1, a week-long diary study showed that state boredom positively predicted calorie, fat, carbohydrate, and protein consumption. In Study 2, a high (vs. low) boredom task increased the desire to snack as opposed to eating something healthy, especially amongst those participants high in objective self-awareness. In addition, Study 3 demonstrated that among people high in objective self-awareness, high (vs. low) boredom increased the consumption of less healthy foods and the consumption of more exciting, healthy foods. However, this did not extend to unexciting, healthy food. Collectively, these novel findings signify the role of boredom in predicting maladaptive and adaptive eating behaviors as a function of the need to distant from the experience of boredom. Further, our results suggest that more exciting, healthy food serves as alternative to maladaptive consumption following boredom
1-10
Moynihan, Andrew B.
620ca164-7151-4ede-bc44-90d528e40358
Tilburg, Wijnand A. P. van
7396f6c2-3a43-4d02-a4a0-97efe4d5ab12
Igou, Eric R.
6cb4c069-c730-407b-bfbd-7c58007459df
Wisman, Arnaud
9f746722-3c11-451b-8421-ead25ff995ca
Donnelly, Alan E.
f6eb1294-11dc-43c3-9a8f-3cec413c727a
Mulcaire, Jessie B.
c696761c-d62d-4427-b2ac-6e4fb1c0a7e1
1 April 2015
Moynihan, Andrew B.
620ca164-7151-4ede-bc44-90d528e40358
Tilburg, Wijnand A. P. van
7396f6c2-3a43-4d02-a4a0-97efe4d5ab12
Igou, Eric R.
6cb4c069-c730-407b-bfbd-7c58007459df
Wisman, Arnaud
9f746722-3c11-451b-8421-ead25ff995ca
Donnelly, Alan E.
f6eb1294-11dc-43c3-9a8f-3cec413c727a
Mulcaire, Jessie B.
c696761c-d62d-4427-b2ac-6e4fb1c0a7e1
Moynihan, Andrew B., Tilburg, Wijnand A. P. van, Igou, Eric R., Wisman, Arnaud, Donnelly, Alan E. and Mulcaire, Jessie B.
(2015)
Eaten up by boredom: consuming food to escape awareness of the bored self.
Frontiers in Psychology, 6, .
(doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00369).
Abstract
Research indicates that being bored affectively marks an appraised lack of meaning in the present situation and in life. We propose that state boredom increases eating in an attempt to distract from this experience, especially among people high in objective self-awareness. Three studies were conducted to investigate boredom’s effects on eating, both naturally occurring in a diary study and manipulated in two experiments. In Study 1, a week-long diary study showed that state boredom positively predicted calorie, fat, carbohydrate, and protein consumption. In Study 2, a high (vs. low) boredom task increased the desire to snack as opposed to eating something healthy, especially amongst those participants high in objective self-awareness. In addition, Study 3 demonstrated that among people high in objective self-awareness, high (vs. low) boredom increased the consumption of less healthy foods and the consumption of more exciting, healthy foods. However, this did not extend to unexciting, healthy food. Collectively, these novel findings signify the role of boredom in predicting maladaptive and adaptive eating behaviors as a function of the need to distant from the experience of boredom. Further, our results suggest that more exciting, healthy food serves as alternative to maladaptive consumption following boredom
Text
fpsyg-06-00369.pdf
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 1 April 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 April 2015
Published date: 1 April 2015
Organisations:
Psychology
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 375868
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/375868
ISSN: 1664-1078
PURE UUID: cbbcff8f-4aa7-4f01-b6ba-c4e09ee4af50
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 17 Apr 2015 11:12
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 19:34
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Andrew B. Moynihan
Author:
Wijnand A. P. van Tilburg
Author:
Eric R. Igou
Author:
Arnaud Wisman
Author:
Alan E. Donnelly
Author:
Jessie B. Mulcaire
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics