Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03735732

Neuronal Correlates of Priming on Goal-directed and Cue-dependent Behavior

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
38 (actual)
Sponsor
University Hospital Tuebingen · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
20 Years – 50 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The current proposal aims to investigate neuronal correlates of implicit and explicit priming paradigms for changing cue-dependent and goal-directed nutritional behavior.

Detailed description

Food choice and intake is a daily and throughout normal subject. However, for more and more people eating habits and the question of food choice are of increasing interest and in several cases even a problem. The prevalence of obesity has tripled in the last decades and it is even spoken of an obesity epidemic. Life style interventions to lose weight often fail on the long run, also because people fall back into former unhealthy eating habits. Various factors influence our daily food choice, not all of which are apparent to ourselves. Thus, food choice might be goal-directed and therefore conscious and reflective, yet in other circumstances the choice to eat something specific might be based on cue dependent processes which are automatic and thus difficult to control. Since a change in eating-behavior and long-lasting weight loss is most problematic to achieve, the current proposal aims to investigate neuronal correlates of implicit and explicit priming paradigms for changing cue-dependent and goal-directed nutritional behavior.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALprimegroups be confronted with health or palatability aspects of food items

Timeline

Start date
2019-02-01
Primary completion
2024-10-01
Completion
2024-12-01
First posted
2018-11-08
Last updated
2024-12-05

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Germany

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03735732. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Neuronal Correlates of Priming on Goal-directed and Cue-dependent Behavior (NCT03735732) · Clinical Trials Directory