Eating as a Clinical Behavior: Motivations, Physiological Control, and Risk Patterns in Disordered Eating
Eating is a fundamental, biologically regulated behavior that integrates hunger signaling, learned reward, cognitive control, and social context. Clinically, “eating” becomes important not only as nutrition, but as a domain where dysregulation can manifest as disordered eating patterns, including restrictive intake, binge eating, compensatory behaviors, and food-related distress. At the physiological level, appetite regulation is… Read More »