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E-raamat: Goal Conflict Model of Eating Behavior: Selected Works of Wolfgang Stroebe

(Emeritus Professor, Utrecht University, Netherlands)
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In the World Library of Psychologists series, international experts present career-long collections of what they judge to be their finest pieces - extracts from books, key articles, salient research findings, and their major practical theoretical contributions.

In this volume:

Overweight and obesity rates have increased dramatically in most industrialized countries, even though more and more people are chronically dieting. Dieters can manage to lose substantial amounts of weight while actively dieting, but most regain it within a few years. So why do most chronic dieters have such difficulty controlling their weight and why is there only a small minority of successful dieters?

To address these questions, Stroebe developed the goal conflict model of eating behavior, a social cognitive theory that attributes the difficulty of chronic dieters to a conflict between two incompatible goals: eating enjoyment and weight control. Although chronic dieters are motivated to pursue their weight control goal, most fail in food-rich environments: Surrounded by palatable food cues that activate thoughts of eating enjoyment, incompatible weight control thoughts are inhibited and weight control intentions are "forgotten". For successful dieters - probably due to past success in exerting self-control - tasty high-calorie food has become associated with weight control thoughts. For them, exposure to palatable food makes weight control thoughts more accessible, enabling them to control their body weight in food-rich environments.

This book contains the key articles of a research program by Stroebe and collaborators to assess the validity of this theory. They succeeded in tracing the processes that lead from temptation to a breakdown of dieting intentions. They also demonstrated that these theoretical principles can be used to develop effective weight loss interventions. The book should be of value for all researcgers, students and clinicians involved in obesity research and treatment.

Acknowledgments vii
List of works reprinted
ix
PART 1 Introduction
1(18)
1 From social psychology to eating research: a personal journey
3(16)
Wolfgang Stroebe
PART 2 The goal conflict model of eating behavior
19(74)
2 Why dieters fail: testing the goal conflict model of eating
21(21)
Wolfgang Stroebe
Wendy Mensink
Henk Aarts
Henk Schut
Arie W. Kruglanski
3 Pleasure in the mind: restrained eating and spontaneous hedonic thoughts about food
42(15)
Esther K. Papies
Wolfgang Stroebe
Henk Aarts
4 The allure of forbidden food: on the role of attention in self-regulation
57(24)
Esther K. Papies
Wolfgang Stroebe
Henk Aarts
5 As pleasure unfolds: hedonic responses to tempting food
81(12)
Wilhelm Hofmann
Guido M. Van Koningsbruggen
Wolfgang Stroebe
Suresh Ramanathan
Henk Aarts
PART 3 Mechanism of dieting success
93(34)
6 Healthy cognition: processes of self-regulatory success in restrained eating
95(18)
Esther K. Papies
Wolfgang Stroebe
Henk Aarts
7 The rise and fall of self-control: temptation-elicited goal activation and effortful goal-directed behavior
113(14)
Guido M. Van Koningsbruggen
Wolfgang Stroebe
Henk Aarts
PART 4 Developing interventions
127(52)
8 Implementation intentions as goal primes: boosting self-control in tempting environments
129(12)
Guido M. Van Koningsbruggen
Wolfgang Stroebe
Esther K. Papies
Henk Aarts
9 Comparing two psychological interventions in reducing impulsive processes of eating behavior: effects on self-selected portion size
141(19)
Guido M. Van Koningsbruggen
Harm Veling
Wolfgang Stroebe
Henk Aarts
10 Targeting impulsive processes of eating behavior via the internet: effects on body weight
160(19)
Harm Veling
Guido M. Van Koningsbruggen
Henk Aarts
Wolfgang Stroebe
PART 5 Conclusions: putting the pieces together
179(60)
11 Why most dieters fail but some succeed: a goal conflict model of eating behavior
181(58)
Wolfgang Stroebe
Guido M. Van Koningsbruggen
Esther K. Papies
Henk Aarts
Index 239
Wolfgang Stroebe is Professor of Social Psychology at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands. He is a former president of the European Association of Social Psychology, a Fellow of numerous psychological societies (e.g., BPS, APS) and co-editor (with Miles Hewstone) of the European Review of Social Psychology. One of his major research interests is strategies of attitude and behaviour change, and he has published widely on this topic.