Food addiction is the clinical occurrence in which individuals develop physical and psychological dependencies
on high fat, high sugar, and highly palatable foods. Past research has demonstrated a number of similarities between
food addiction and drug use disorders including the activation of specific brain regions and neurotransmitters,
disrupted neuronal circuitry, and behavioral indicators of addiction such as continued use despite negative
consequences. The present study examined the role of impulsivity and emotion dysregulation in food addiction
as both play salient roles in drug use disorders. Poisson regression analyses using data from 878 undergraduate
students revealed negative urgency, the tendency to act impulsively when under distress, and emotion dysregulation
positively predicted symptom count on the Yale Food Addiction Scale (Gearhardt, Corbin, & Brownell,
2009) whereas a lack of premeditation negatively predicted symptom count (all ps b 0.05). Future research is
needed to confirm precursors to eating episodes in food addiction, elucidate causal mechanisms, and support
an explanatory model of food addiction.