# The impact of food stimuli and fasting on cognitive control in task switching

**Authors:** Viktoria Maydych, Hanna Pöschel, Sebastian Kübler, Torsten Schubert

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s00426-023-01884-y · Psychological Research · 2023-10-19

## TL;DR

This study explores how food-related stimuli and fasting affect cognitive control during task switching.

## Contribution

It introduces food stimuli and fasting as factors influencing task-switching performance, extending beyond monetary rewards.

## Key findings

- Switching to food-related tasks resulted in lower switch costs in both task-switching paradigms.
- Fasting increased switch costs for neutral digit tasks in the alternating runs paradigm.
- Restrictive eating showed a negative trend with switch costs but was not statistically significant.

## Abstract

Previous research demonstrated motivation-control interactions in task switching. However, motivational effects on switch costs have been mostly examined using monetary rewards. Here, we investigated whether stimulus material linked to food and fasting affect control processes in task switching. We predicted that switching to the task comprising food stimuli would be facilitated, which should result in lower switch costs for this task, and that these effects would be stronger with higher motivational salience of the food stimuli, i.e. in hungry individuals and/or individuals with restrictive eating. Participants switched between categorising food items as sweet or savoury and digits as odd or even in two task-switching paradigms: an alternating runs and a voluntary task switching. Hunger was induced by 14 h fasting in the experimental compared to the control group. Results showed lower switch costs for the motivational-affective food task in both task-switching paradigms and in both groups. Switch costs for the neutral digit task were significantly higher in the fasting group compared to the control group in alternating runs task switching only. Individual differences in restrictive eating were related negatively but not significantly to the size of the switch costs. All in all, the results demonstrate an impact of motivational-affective stimuli on cognitive control in task switching and suggest a potential modulatory role of motivational states, though the findings need to be replicated.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** restrictive eating (MESH:D002313)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

53 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10965672/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10965672