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The effects of acute psychosocial stress on binge...
Journal article

The effects of acute psychosocial stress on binge urges, inhibitory control, negative urgency and eating pathology in Binge Eating Disorder

Abstract

Stress is frequently reported as a trigger for binge episodes, yet it remains unclear how subjective and physiological stress responses interact with cognitive and affective mechanisms to increase binge eating risk. The present study investigated the effects of acute psychosocial stress on binge urges, focusing on the role of state- and trait-level vulnerabilities. Twenty-eight individuals with BED were randomized to either a Stress condition (n = 14) or No-Stress condition (n = 14). Following an acute psychosocial stressor, participants completed the Stop-Signal Task to behaviourally assess inhibitory control. Self-reported mood, binge urge ratings and saliva samples for stress biomarker detection were collected at three timepoints throughout the experimental session. Results demonstrated that acute psychosocial stress elicited marked increases in total mood disturbance, without corresponding physiological stress responses and significantly impaired inhibitory control. Notably, only subjective stress responses were associated with greater binge urges, whereas physiological stress responses were not. This dissociation highlights subjective stress reactivity as a clinically meaningful mechanism of risk in BED, underscoring the potential value of interventions that target stress perception and regulation to reduce binge eating vulnerability.

Authors

Brassard SL; Punia K; Laliberte M; Liu H; Lucibello KM; Potter S; Balodis IM

Journal

Neuroscience, Vol. 603, , pp. 93–104

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

March 20, 2026

DOI

10.1016/j.neuroscience.2026.03.024

ISSN

0306-4522

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