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Food & addiction : a comprehensive handbook / edited by Ashley N. Gearhardt, Kelly D. Brownell, Mark S. Gold, and Marc N. Potenza.
Uniform title
Food and addiction.
Format
Book
Language
English
Εdition
Second edition.
Published/Created
New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2024]
©2024
Description
1 online resource (601 pages)
Availability
Available Online
Oxford Scholarship - Oxford University Press: Psychology
Details
Subject(s)
Eating disorders
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Eating disorders
—
Animal models
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Obesity
[Browse]
Compulsive eating
[Browse]
Drug abuse
—
Treatment
[Browse]
Editor
Gearhardt, Ashley N.
[Browse]
Brownell, Kelly D.
[Browse]
Gold, Mark S.
[Browse]
Potenza, Marc N., 1965-
[Browse]
Series
Oxford scholarship online.
[More in this series]
Summary note
Since the last edition of the Handbook of Food and Addiction in 2012, research on this topic has progressed in many ways. Evidence is growing that certain foods, especially highly processed foods with high levels of refined carbohydrates and/or added fats, can trigger addictive processes.
Notes
Previous edition: published as Food and addiction. 2012.
Bibliographic references
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Target audience
Specialized.
Source of description
Description based on online resource and publisher information; title from PDF title page (viewed on June 21, 2024).
Contents
Cover
Food &
Addiction
Copyright
Contents
About the Editors
Contributors
Introduction: Why This? Why Now?
PART I: Research on Psychological Contributors to Food and Addiction
1. Assessment of Food Addiction: A DSM-5 Update
2. Food Addiction in Children and Adolescents
3. Food Addiction, Dietary Patterns, and Obesity
4. Sex Differences in the Risk for Substance Use Disorders and Compulsive Overeating
5. Food Craving in Food Addiction
6. Impulsivity and Food Addiction
7. Trauma and Food Addiction
8. Food Addiction and Comorbidity
9. Sleep Dysfunction, Night Eating, and Food Addiction
10. Sugar, Stress, and Metabolism: Relevance to Food Addiction
11. Bingeing, Tolerance, and Withdrawal: What Have We Learned From Models of Food Addiction?
12. Food Addiction in Anorexia Nervosa
13. Dietary Restraint and Food Addiction
14. Comorbidity of Food Addiction and Behavioral Addictions
15. Interactions between Alcohol Use, Eating Behaviors, and Weight
PART II: Research on Biological Contributors to Food and Addiction
16. Dopamine Magnitude and Timing in Food Reward
17. Endocannabinoid Signaling and Food Addiction
18. Orexins in Food and Addiction
19. An Investigation of Brain-Gut-Microbiome Interactions in Food Addiction and Obesity
20. Food Reinforcement Architecture: Profiles for Impulsive and Compulsive Overeating and Food Abuse
21. Epigenetics of Addiction and Eating Disorders
22. Hormones, Hunger, and Food and Addiction
23. Negative Emotional Side of Food Addiction: Negative Affect and Urgency
24. Biological Contributors of Stress as a Common Factor across Overeating and Substance Use Disorders
25. Prenatal Contributions to the Development of Food Addiction
26. Pubertal Development and the Development of Dysregulated Eating.
27. The Neuroscience of Food 'Wanting' and 'Liking'
28. Sign-Tracking to Food and Drug Cues: A Potential Marker of Risk for the Development of Addiction
29. Neurobiology of Binge Eating Disorder and Implications for Food Addiction
30. Hippocampal-dependent Memory Impairment and the Western Diet: Implications for the Regulation and Dysregulation of Food and Drug Intake
PART III: Food Characteristics and Addictive Eating
31. What Foods May Be Addictive?
32. Ultra-processed Foods and Food Addiction
33. Sugar Addiction in Animal Models
34. Incubation of Sucrose Craving in Animal Models
35. Glycemic Load and Food Addiction
36. Fructose, Fatty Liver, and Addiction
37. Sugar-sweetened Beverages and Caffeine: The Role of Addiction
38. Savor the Flavor: Diet, Taste, and Nutrition
39. Non-nutritive Sweeteners and Reward Mechanisms
40. Industry Practices in the Development of Potentially Addictive Foods
PART IV: Clinical Approaches and Implications
41. Food Addiction and Treatment of Eating Disorders
42. Psychological, Behavioral, and Pharmacological Treatments for Binge Eating Disorder: Implications of Addiction Perspectives
43. Food Addiction and Obesity Treatment Outcomes
44. Food Addiction and Bariatric Surgery
45. Psychosocial Interventions for Food Addiction
46. Deep Brain Stimulation for Obesity: Targets and Mechanisms of Neuromodulation in Clinical Practice
47. Pharmacotherapy for Obesity that Targets Addictive Mechanisms
48. Pharmacotherapy for Addiction that Targets Obesity Mechanisms
49. Neurocircuitry Underlying the Addictive Dimension of Overeating and Obesity
50. Food and Addiction: A Personal Story
PART V: Public Health, Legal, and Policy Implications
51. What Lessons for Food Policy Can Be Learned from Tobacco Control?.
52. Food Marketing and Neural Mechanisms Implicated in Addiction
53. Is Food Marketing Feeding Americans' Sugar Habit? How Sugary Drink Companies Hook Children and Youth
54. Implications of Food Addiction on Stigma
55. Food Insecurity: An Emerging Risk Factor for Food Addiction
56. Taxes and Warning Labels as Tools to Improve Dietary Quality
57. Legal Implications of Food Addiction
PART VI: Critiques of Food Addiction
58. Addictive-like Overeating and Undereating
59. Disordered Eating and the Brain: Can Food Be Addictive?
PART VII: Concluding Comments
60. Food and Addiction: Conclusions and Scientific, Social, Legal, and Legislative Implications
Index.
Show 73 more Contents items
ISBN
0-19-067107-6
0-19-067106-8
OCLC
1407033349
Doi
10.1093/oso/9780190671051.001.0001
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