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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 16, 2026

Studying Food Reward and Motivation in Humans
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Explicit and Implicit Devaluation Effects of Food-Specific Response Inhibition Training.

Loukia Tzavella1, Christopher D Chambers1

  • 1Cardiff University Brain Research Imaging Centre, CF24 4HQ, UK.

Journal of Cognition
|February 1, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Response inhibition training, where participants learn to withhold responses to specific foods, effectively reduces their appeal. This method shows promise for changing eating behaviors by devaluing high-energy foods.

Keywords:
devaluationfoodgo/no-goprimingresponse inhibitiontraining

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Area of Science:

  • Behavioral Psychology
  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Neuroscience of Eating

Background:

  • Overvaluation of energy-dense foods contributes to compulsive eating behaviors like overeating.
  • Response inhibition training can devalue appetitive stimuli, offering a strategy for behavior modification.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the effectiveness of response inhibition training in reducing the evaluation of specific foods.
  • To assess explicit and implicit measures of food devaluation following training.

Main Methods:

  • Two preregistered experiments utilized go/no-go training with energy-dense foods.
  • Participants learned to either respond (go) or inhibit responses (no-go) to food stimuli.
  • Explicit liking and implicit affective priming were used to measure devaluation.

Main Results:

  • Response inhibition training led to significant devaluation effects, both in explicit ratings and affective priming.
  • Priming effects for no-go food items were minimal, suggesting successful devaluation.
  • Experiment 2 replicated most findings, confirming the robustness of the devaluation effect.

Conclusions:

  • Response inhibition training effectively devalues targeted foods, supporting its potential for behavior change.
  • Affective priming measures may capture training-induced devaluation, though further research on sensitivity is needed.