Sinful Foods: Measuring Implicit Associations Between Food Categories and Moral Attributes in Anorexic, Orthorexic, and Healthy Subjects

Recently, neurocognitive studies have shown that food categorization is sensitive to both the properties of the food stimuli (e.g., calorie content) and the individual characteristics of subjects (e.g., BMI, eating disorders) asked to categorize these stimuli. Furthermore, groups of patients with ea...

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Published inFrontiers in nutrition (Lausanne) Vol. 9; p. 884003
Main Authors Lakritz, Clara, Tournayre, Lola, Ouellet, Marilou, Iceta, Sylvain, Duriez, Philibert, Masetti, Vincent, Lafraire, Jérémie
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Frontiers Media S.A 13.06.2022
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Summary:Recently, neurocognitive studies have shown that food categorization is sensitive to both the properties of the food stimuli (e.g., calorie content) and the individual characteristics of subjects (e.g., BMI, eating disorders) asked to categorize these stimuli. Furthermore, groups of patients with eating disorders (ED) were described as relying more on moral criteria to form food categories than were control subjects. The present studies built on these seminal articles and aimed to determine whether certain food properties might trigger moral categories preferentially in subjects suffering from ED and in the general population. Using a Go/No-Go Association Task, Study 1 focused on the extent to which food categories are laden with moral attributes in ED patients compared to control subjects. Study 2 was a follow-up with a different design (an Implicit Association Test), another food variable (calorie content), and two non-clinical subgroups (orthorexic and healthy control subjects). Results revealed for the first time implicit associations between food variables cueing for energy density and moral attributes in the general population, the population suffering from anorexia nervosa, and subjects suffering from disordered eating such as orthorexia nervosa. These findings suggest that moralization of food is a pervasive phenomenon that can be measured with methods reputed to be less vulnerable to self-presentation or social desirability biases.
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PMCID: PMC9234570
Edited by: Carol Coricelli, Western University (Canada), Canada
This article was submitted to Nutritional Epidemiology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Nutrition
Reviewed by: Isabel Urdapilleta, Université Paris 8, France; Riccardo Migliavada, University of Gastronomic Sciences, Italy
ISSN:2296-861X
2296-861X
DOI:10.3389/fnut.2022.884003