Measurement and validation of measures for impulsive food choice across obese and healthy-weight individuals

•We developed and validated a novel and brief method (FCQ) of measuring delay discounting for food.•Data from the FCQ correlated with data from computerized food discounting task.•For the FCQ, discounting for food was stronger with lower-magnitude outcomes.•Body fat predicted discounting on the FCQ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Appetite 2015-07, Vol.90, p.254-263
Hauptverfasser: Hendrickson, Kelsie L., Rasmussen, Erin B., Lawyer, Steven R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We developed and validated a novel and brief method (FCQ) of measuring delay discounting for food.•Data from the FCQ correlated with data from computerized food discounting task.•For the FCQ, discounting for food was stronger with lower-magnitude outcomes.•Body fat predicted discounting on the FCQ and computerized food discounting task.•We also replicated discounting research with monetary outcomes. The present study established a brief measure of delay discounting for food, the Food Choice Questionnaire (FCQ), and compared it to another more established measure of food discounting that uses the adjusting amount (AA) procedure. One hundred forty-four undergraduate participants completed either two measures of hypothetical food discounting (a computerized food AA procedure or the FCQ) or two measures of hypothetical money discounting [a computerized monetary AA procedure or the Monetary Choice questionnaire (MCQ)]. The money condition was used as a replication of previous work. Results indicated that the FCQ yielded consistent data that strongly correlated with the AA food discounting task. Moreover, a magnitude effect was found with the FCQ, such that smaller amounts of food were discounted more steeply than larger amounts. In addition, individuals with higher percent body fat (PBF) discounted food more steeply than individuals with lower PBF. The MCQ, which also produced a magnitude effect, and the monetary adjusting amount procedure yielded data that were orderly, consistent, and correlated strongly with one another, replicating previous literature. This study is the first to show that a novel measure of food discounting (the FCQ) yields consistent data strongly correlated with an established measure of food discounting and is sensitive to PBF. Moreover, the FCQ is easier and quicker to administer than the AA procedure, which may interest researchers who use discounting tasks in food-related research.
ISSN:0195-6663
1095-8304
DOI:10.1016/j.appet.2015.03.015