Computational mechanisms underpinning greater exploratory behaviour in excess weight relative to healthy weight adolescents
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Explore/exploit Computational modelling Adolescent obesity Decision-making Addictive eating
Date
2023-02-06Referencia bibliográfica
Jocelyn Halim... [et al.]. Computational mechanisms underpinning greater exploratory behaviour in excess weight relative to healthy weight adolescents, Appetite, Volume 183, 2023, 106484, ISSN 0195-6663, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2023.106484]
Sponsorship
Junta de Andalucia; National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia GNT2009464Abstract
Obesity in adolescence is associated with cognitive changes that lead to difficulties in shifting unhealthy habits in
favour of alternative healthy behaviours, similar to addictive behaviours. An outstanding question is whether this
shift in goal-directed behaviour is driven by over-exploitation or over-exploration of rewarding outcomes. Here,
we addressed this question by comparing explore/exploit behaviour on the Iowa Gambling Task in 43 adolescents
with excess weight against 38 adolescents with healthy weight. We computationally modelled both
exploitation behaviour (e.g., reinforcement sensitivity and inverse decay parameters), and explorative behaviour
(e.g., maximum directed exploration value). We found that overall, adolescents with excess weight displayed
more behavioural exploration than their healthy-weight counterparts – specifically, demonstrating greater
overall switching behaviour. Computational models revealed that this behaviour was driven by a higher
maximum directed exploration value in the excess-weight group (U = 520.00, p = .005, BF10 = 5.11). Importantly,
however, we found substantial evidence that groups did not differ in reinforcement sensitivity (U =
867.00, p = .641, BF10 = 0.30). Overall, our study demonstrates a preference for exploratory behaviour in adolescents
with excess weight, independent of sensitivity to reward. This pattern could potentially underpin an
intrinsic desire to explore energy-dense unhealthy foods – an as-yet untapped mechanism that could be targeted
in future treatments of obesity in adolescents.