Carbohydrates Don’t Boost Self-Control
October 22, 2012 by UPI - United Press International, Inc.
CHICAGO (UPI) — U.S. researchers say sugar does not appear to have a metabolic boost for self-control.
Psychological scientist Daniel C. Molden of Northwestern University in Chicago and colleagues said many had thought self-control relied on carbohydrate metabolism — people deplete their carbohydrate stores as they exert self-control, making it more difficult to exert self-control until the stores are built up again.
Molden and colleagues decided to test this model in a series of four experiments in which participants’ baseline glucose levels were assessed prior to performing tasks that required self-control.
The researchers found no evidence for a relationship between self-control and glucose metabolism.
“Follow-up studies indicated that participants who rinsed their mouths with a carbohydrate solution showed improved self-control, despite the fact that they didn’t ingest the solution and there was no observable change in their blood glucose levels,” the study authors said in a statement. “These findings suggest a motivational as opposed to metabolic mechanism for self-control.”
The study was published in the journal Psychological Science.





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