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Eating Disorders 2016

September 12-13, 2016

Volume 6, Issue 7(Suppl)

J Obes Weight Loss Ther 2016

ISSN: 2165-7904 JOWT, an open access journal

conferenceseries

.com

September 12-13, 2016 Philadelphia, USA

World Congress on

Eating Disorders, Nutrition & Mental Health

Stress-eaters and stress-undereaters: Factors affecting their bi-directional feeding response in humans

and in an animal model

Michael Emond

Laurentian University, Canada

A

n emerging finding in the research literature, when it comes to determining how stress affects food intake and food choice,

is that there is a continuum of stress-eaters; with some people in the population trending towards eating more than normal

(~40%) when exposed to life stressors and some people eating less than normal (~40%). Studies from my laboratory have

helped to identify these two major subgroups in the overall population: stress-eaters and stress-undereaters. This research has

used both human research to determine how stress affects food choice and food intake in these two populations and animal

models in an attempt to determine the possible etiology of stress-eating and stress-undereating. In human studies we have

used a field study to get true to life data and a clearly picture of how daily stress affects the eating habits and food choice of

stress-eaters and stress-undereaters. We have also conducted a controlled experimental study which induced two different

kinds of emotional stress to determine how different types of stress affected emotional/stress eating. In animal studies we have

done breeding studies in an effort to determine if there is a genetic component in producing the two stress-eating populations.

And most recently we have used operant conditioning techniques to determine if there is a possible learned component of the

etiologiy of stress-eating. This talk will give an overview of this research and, through this, help illuminate this emotional eating

response that affects roughly 80% of the population.

Biography

Michael Hamilton Emond completed his PhD from McMaster University and Post-doctoral studies from John Hopkins University School of Medicine. He is currently

an Associate Professor at Laurentian University.

memond@laurentian.ca

Michael Emond, J Obes Weight Loss Ther 2016, 6:7(Suppl)

http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2165-7904.C1.036