Feeding & Eating Disorders (College Board AP® Psychology): Study Guide
Symptoms of feeding & eating disorders
Feeding and eating disorders are characterized persistent disturbances in eating behavior that impair physical health or psychological functioning
These disturbances go beyond normal variations in diet or food preferences and are among the most medically serious psychological disorders, as they have relatively high mortality rates
Two disorders include:
anorexia nervosa
bulimia nervosa
Anorexia nervosa
Anorexia nervosa is characterized by:
restriction of energy intake as the person severely limits the amount they eat
This leads to significantly low body weight
intense fear of gaining weight even when already significantly underweight
distorted body image, which is an inaccurate perception of body size
They may deny the seriousness of their low body weight
E.g. a person who is dangerously underweight but perceives themselves as overweight and continues to restrict food intake
There are two presentations of anorexia:
Restricting type: weight loss through dieting, fasting, and/or excessive exercise
There is no binge eating or purging
Binge-eating/purging type: weight loss through restriction but also accompanied by episodes of binge eating followed by purging
Medical consequences of anorexia are severe and can be life-threatening. They include:
malnutrition
electrolyte imbalances
cardiac arrhythmias
bone density loss (osteoporosis)
amenorrhea (cessation of menstruation)
organ failure and death in extreme cases
Anorexia nervosa has the highest mortality rate of any psychological disorder
It predominantly affects young women, though it is increasingly recognized in males and across age groups
Bulimia nervosa
Bulimia nervosa is characterized by:
recurrent binge eating, where the individual eats a large amount of food in a with a sense of lack of control over eating during the episode
compensatory behaviors to prevent weight gain following a binge:
Purging type: self-induced vomiting; misuse of laxatives, diuretics, or enemas
Non-purging type: fasting or excessive exercise
overevaluation of body weight and shape where the person's self-worth is strongly tied to their appearance
E.g. a person who frequently binges and then purges, experiencing shame but feeling unable to stop the cycle
Bulimia shares similar features with anorexia (preoccupation with weight and body image) but differs in that:
people with bulimia are often within the normal weight range, making the disorder less visible
the binge-purge cycle is the defining behavioral pattern
Medical consequences of bulimia include:
dental erosion from stomach acid (frequent vomiting)
electrolyte imbalances
esophageal damage
swollen salivary glands
cardiac complications from electrolyte disturbances
Causes of feeding & eating disorders
Feeding and eating disorders are best explained by interacting biological, psychological, behavioral, and sociocultural factors
Biological and genetic factors
Genetic factors: both anorexia and bulimia are heritable
They run in families and twin studies show higher concordance in identical twins
Neurochemical factors: both eating disorders are linked to serotonin dysregulation
Serotonin affects mood, appetite, and impulse control
Personality traits: genetic predisposition to perfectionism, anxiety, and obsessiveness, particularly in anorexia
Psychological factors
Cognitive distortions: distorted body image (seeing oneself as larger than one is) and overvaluation of thinness as a measure of self-worth are central cognitive features of eating disorders
Perfectionism and low self-esteem: eating disorder behaviors are often attempts to gain control and meet unrealistic standards
Emotional regulation: binge eating can function as a way of managing negative emotions
The temporary relief from emotional distress negatively reinforces the bingeing behavior
Behavioral factors
Dieting as a trigger: Restriction can initiate disordered eating, particularly in genetically vulnerable individuals
Negative reinforcement (anorexia): avoidance of feared foods is negatively reinforced (reduces anxiety), maintaining restrictive eating patterns
Negative reinforcement (bulimia): the binge-purge cycle in bulimia is maintained as the purge temporarily relieves the guilt and physical discomfort of the binge
Social and cultural factors
Cultural ideals of thinness: eating disorders are significantly more prevalent in cultures with strong sociocultural pressure to be thin
Western cultures particularly equate thinness with attractiveness, success, and self-control
Media influence: exposure to idealized body images through media is associated with body dissatisfaction and disordered eating
This may explain why eating disorders are increasingly identified globally as Western cultural influences spread
Examiner Tips and Tricks
For Skill 2.D, research on eating disorders raises significant ethical considerations. When evaluating, consider that researchers must ensure:
careful screening of participants (to identify vulnerability)
informed consent
the right to withdraw
protection from harmful or triggering content
access to appropriate support or treatment if distress occurs
For Skill 4.A, you may be asked to make a defensible claim about explanations of eating disorders. A strong claim is that:
the biological perspective explains vulnerability (genetics and neurochemistry)
the psychological perspective explains mechanisms (cognitive distortions and perfectionism)
the sociocultural perspective explains triggers (cultural ideals of thinness)
Conclude that the biopsychosocial model provides the most complete explanation, as no single factor alone is sufficient
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