Connecting self-report and instrumental behavior during incubation of food craving in humans.
Nicholas A RuizDevlin EckardtLisa A BriandMathieu WimmerVishnu P MurtyPublished in: Learning & memory (Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.) (2024)
Incubation of craving is a phenomenon describing the intensification of craving for a reward over extended periods of abstinence from reinforcement. Animal models use instrumental markers of craving to reward cues to examine incubation, while human paradigms rely on subjective self-reports. Here, we characterize an animal-inspired, novel human paradigm that showed strong positive relationships between self-reports and instrumental markers of craving for favored palatable foods. Further, we found consistent nonlinear relationships with time since last consumption and self-reports, and preliminary patterns between time and instrumental responses. These findings provide a novel approach to establishing an animal-inspired human model of incubation.