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Appetite: The Psychology of Eating and Drinking - PSY352

The need to eat and drink is essential to the survival of all animals. This unit examines the psychology of these activities, with a primarily human slant. In particular, the unit covers the anatomy and physiology of the whole ingestive system: what starts and stops eating; why we like and prefer some foods over others; and the psychobiology of dieting, starvation, obesity, anorexia/bulimia. The unit adopts a broad perspective, so that the impact of human food choice on health, the economy and the environment, are constantly kept in focus.

Credit Points: 3
When Offered:

2013 - Next offered in 2013

Staff Contact(s): Associate Professor Dick Stevenson
Prerequisites:

PSY222 or PSY248 Prerequisite Information

Corequisites:

NCCW(s): PSY239, PSY346
Unit Designation(s):

Science

Unit Type:
Assessed As: Graded
Offered By:

Department of Psychology

Faculty of Human Sciences

Timetable Information

For unit timetable information please visit the Timetables@Macquarie Website