Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41366-024-01489-4
Title: The effects of acute social ostracism on subsequent snacking behavior and future body mass index in children
Authors: Pink AE
Teo R
Chua B
Kong F 
Nadarajan R
Pei JY
Tan CHY
Toh JY
Chong YS 
Tan KH 
Yap F 
Meaney MJ 
Broekman BFP 
Cheon BK.
Keywords: Social Exclusion
Rejection
Food Intake
Obesity
Social Anxiety
Issue Date: 27-Feb-2024
Publisher: Nature Portfolio
Citation: Pink AE, Teo R, Chua B, Kong F, Nadarajan R, Pei JY, Tan CHY, Toh JY, Chong YS, Tan KH, Yap F, Meaney MJ, Broekman BFP, Cheon BK. (2024-02-27). The effects of acute social ostracism on subsequent snacking behavior and future body mass index in children. International Journal of Obesity 48 (6) : 867-875. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41366-024-01489-4
Abstract: Background/Objectives: Ostracism may lead to increased food intake, yet it is unclear whether greater reactivity to ostracism contributes to higher body mass index (BMI). We investigated whether children who exhibited greater stress to social exclusion subsequently consume more energy and whether this predicts BMI 6- and 18-months later. Subjects/Methods: Children (8.5 years-old) (N = 262, males = 50.4%; Chinese = 58.4%) completed a laboratory-based manipulation of social exclusion (the Cyberball task) prior to an ad-libitum snack. Heart rate variability (HRV) was measured during the inclusion and exclusion conditions and proportionate changes were calculated as a physiological measure of exclusion-related stress. Social anxiety and social-emotional assets were also measured as moderators. Results: Greater stress (as measured physiologically or by self-report) did not directly, or indirectly via energy intake, predict later BMI (at 9- and 10-years). However, among children reporting higher social anxiety, greater stress as measured by proportionate changes in HRV was associated with increased energy intake (B = 532.88, SE = 226.49, t(255) = 2.35, [CI95 = 86.85,978.92]). A significant moderated mediation was also observed (index: (b = 0.01, bootSE = 0.01, [CI95 = 0.001, 0.036]), such that among children reporting higher social anxiety, greater stress from social exclusion predicted increased energy intake from a subsequent snack, which in turn predicted higher BMI 1.5 years later. Conclusion: This prospective study suggests that a pattern of greater snack intake in response to heightened vulnerability to the effects of ostracism may contribute to increases in child BMI scores.
Source Title: International Journal of Obesity
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/249813
ISSN: 0307-0565
DOI: 10.1038/s41366-024-01489-4
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