Abstract

Sullivan, N. J., Fitzsimons, G. J., Platt, M. L., & Huettel, S. A. (2019). Indulgent foods can paradoxically promote disciplined dietary choices. Psychological Science, 30(2), 273–287. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797618817509
This article has been revised and republished following identification of a coding error that affected some of the results of the original article, as published on January 9, 2019.
The article was revised after nonauthor colleagues noticed an error in the publicly available analysis code (https://osf.io/gkw6c/); this error resulted in incorrect assignment of trials to conditions and/or omission of some trials from inclusion in choice analyses. This mis-assignment of trials to conditions affected the statistics associated with the percentages of disciplined vs. indulgent choices associated with common-disciplined and common-indulgent trials; those analyses are now corrected in this version. The authors verified that other analyses (i.e., decision weights, gaze fixations, and simulations) were not affected by coding errors.
Due to the extensive updates required, the article has been revised and republished. The revised article was reviewed by the current Editor-in-Chief of Psychological Science, the Chair of the APS Publications Committee, and the original action editor on the manuscript; all have approved this republished version.
