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1 .This is Scientific American 60-Second Mind, I'm Christie Nicholson. Got a minute?
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2 .Stress can make some people (me included) lose our appetite.
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3 .And other folks find comfort in food.
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4 .But such behaviors may actually even out in the long term.
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5 .Because researchers find that people who change eating patterns when stressed out may actually make up for those not-so-healthy impulses during easier times.
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6 .So finds a study in the journal Psychological Science.
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7 .Volunteers for the study self-identified as either "munchers" or "skippers".
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8 .Each person had to interact with another person via video chat, with the intention of meeting them later.
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9 .After each video interaction participants received a message either stating that their partner decided not to meet them, or that they were excited to meet them.
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10 .As a control, some participants were told the study had just been canceled.
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11 .Then the researchers offered ice cream to everyone as much as they wanted.
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12 .The munchers who got rejected ate more ice cream than did those in the control group, and the skippers who were rejected ate less.
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13 .All as you'd expect.
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14 .But here's the twist: Among the participants who received positive feedback,
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15 .the munchers actually ate less than the control group.
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16 .And the skippers ate more.
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17 .So even stress eaters are sometimes less-eaters.
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18 .Unless they're always stressed out.
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19 .Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American 60-Second Mind. I'm Christie Nicholson.
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