An Online Diary Study Testing the Role of Functional and Dysfunctional Self-Licensing in Unhealthy Snacking

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Date

2023

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Academic Press Ltd- Elsevier Science Ltd

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Green Open Access

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Abstract

In the present study, we aimed to investigate how two types of self-licensing (functional and dysfunctional selflicensing) are related to unhealthy snack consumption. Self-licensing refers to the act of using justifications before gratifications and has been associated with higher snack consumption. Previous research has found that while functional self-licensing decreases unhealthy snack consumption, dysfunctional self-licensing increases the number of calories taken from unhealthy snacks. Building upon existing evidence, we addressed functional and dysfunctional self-licensing to investigate how self-licensing behaviors are associated with daily variables (i.e., stress and sleep) and unhealthy snacking habits. Participants (N = 124) were given a battery of measures at the start of the week and asked to send their snack consumption every night for a week via an online questionnaire, along with daily stress and sleep items. The data were analyzed with Hierarchical Linear Modelling. Neither selflicensing measures nor unhealthy snacking habits predicted unhealthy snack consumption. Daily stress was associated with lower unhealthy snack consumption. However, the interaction between daily stress and functional self-licensing was significant, suggesting that on stressful days functional self-licensers consume even fewer unhealthy snacks compared to less stressful days. Functional and dysfunctional self-licensing are rather new constructs which is why examining their effects is important for further research. However, in contrast to the existing evidence, we failed to find an effect of both types of self-licensing on snack consumption, suggesting the effect depends on potential contextual or individual-specific factors. Future research using a dieting sample is warranted for a better understanding of how functional and dysfunctional self-licensing operate.

Description

Oner, Sezin/0000-0001-8124-3554; Sezer, Berke/0000-0003-1839-3394

Keywords

Functional self -licensing, Dysfunctional self -licensing, Sleep, Stress, Unhealthy snacking habit, Hierarchical linear modelling, caloric intake, Hierarchical linear modelling, Unhealthy snacking habit, licensing, night, Functional self-licensing, Dysfunctional self-licensing, feeding behavior, Stress, human experiment, Habits, Surveys and Questionnaires, Humans, human, sleep, habit, physiological stress, fast food, calorie, adult, questionnaire, article, Feeding Behavior, major clinical study, Snacks, Sleep, diet, Energy Intake

Fields of Science

0501 psychology and cognitive sciences, 05 social sciences

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WoS Q

Q1

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Q1
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2

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Appetite

Volume

181

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Start Page

106389

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CrossRef : 2

Scopus : 2

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Mendeley Readers : 19

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2

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4

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