Journal Article10.1016/S0193-953X(18)31039-6
Acquired behavior controlling energy intake and output
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TL;DR: Analyzing feeding behavior in a classical conditioning framework emphasizes stimulus reinforcement rather than response reinforcement in order to understand how food intake is normally controlled by the learning induced by feeding situations and the physiological aftereffects of feeding.
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About: This article is published in Psychiatric Clinics of North America. The article was published on 01 Dec 1978. The article focuses on the topics: Reinforcement & Classical conditioning.
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Citations
Conditioned Salivation in Obese Subjects with Different Weight Kinetics
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TL;DR: It is hoped that these four comments and the more extensive reply help to clarify issues that are crucial to slowing the rise in obesity.
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Combating Excessive Eating: A Role for Four Evidence-Based Remedies
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TL;DR: The aim of this study is to review the control of energy balance and outline some causes of and remedies for excessive energy intake.
References
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Helplessness: On Depression, Development, and Death
Martin E. P. Seligman
- 01 Jan 1975
TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a learned-helplessness model of depression and developed a set of guidelines for depression and learned helplessness, including depression, anxiety and unpredictability, childhood failure, sudden psychosomatic death controllability.
5.7K
Some Problems and Misconceptions Related to the Construct of Internal Versus External Control of Reinforcement
TL;DR: Rotter as discussed by the authors discusses the place of this construct within the framework of social learning theory, misconceptions and problems of a theoretical nature, and misuses and limitations associated with measurement, as well as the logic of predictions from test scores.
1.9K
The role of depot fat in the hypothalamic control of food intake in the rat.
TL;DR: Findings do not support the suggestion made by Brobeck (1946) that food intake is controlled as part of the normal regulation of body temperature by a thermosensitive hypothalamic centre and the maximum daily in take of food during hyperphagia appears to be determined by some limiting factor additional to the hypothalamic mechanism.
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Restrained and unrestrained eating
C. Peter Herman,Deborah L. Mack +1 more
TL;DR: Nisbett's model of obesity implies that individual differences in relative deprivation within obese and normal weight groups should produce corresponding within-group differences in eating behavior, but consideration was given to the concept of "restraint" as an important behavioral mechanism affecting the expression of physiologically-based hungar.
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Regulation of energy intake and the body weight: the glucostatic theory and the lipostatic hypothesis.
TL;DR: With the collaboration of Anliker, an experimental psychologist versed in the “Skinner box” techniques, the study of the probability of response to exposure to food and on the frequency of work for food of normal mice, as well as of littermates with the hereditary obese hyperglycemic syndrome, goldthioglucose obesity, and hypothalamic obesity is undertaken.
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