844 results on '"FOOD REWARD"'
Search Results
2. Effects of Exercise on Energy Intake-Prescription of Resistance Exercise
- Published
- 2024
3. Different Menstrual Cycle in Eating Behavior Following Resistance Exercise
- Published
- 2024
4. The effects of acute exercise on food intake and appetite in adolescents with and without obesity: A systematic review and meta‐analysis.
- Author
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Moore, Halim, Siroux, Julie, Sevilla‐Lorente, Raquel, Prado, Wagner Luiz, Damaso, Ana Raimunda, Pereira, Bruno, and Thivel, David
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EXERCISE physiology , *REWARD (Psychology) , *ADOLESCENT obesity , *FOOD consumption , *EXERCISE intensity - Abstract
Summary This systematic review and meta‐analysis synthesized evidence pertaining to consummatory and appetitive responses to acute exercise in children and adolescents with and without obesity (5–18 years). Articles reporting on supervised, controlled trials of any modality, duration, or intensity with laboratory‐measured food intake were found using MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Cochrane up to July 2023. Differences between conditions in laboratory energy and macronutrient intake, appetite sensations, and food reward were quantitatively synthesized using random‐effects meta‐analyses. Thirty‐five studies were eligible for the systematic review of energy intake, consisting of 60 distinct intervention arms with lean (
n = 374) and overweight/obesity participants (n = 325;k = 51 eligible for meta‐analysis). Study quality as indicated by the Effective Public Healthy Practice Project tool was rated as low and moderate risk of bias for 80% and 20% of studies, respectively. Acute exercise had no significant effect on energy intake during an ad libitum test meal (mean difference [MD] = −4.52 [−30.58, 21.54] kcal,p = .729). Whilst absolute carbohydrate intake was lower after exercise (23 arms; MD = −6.08 [−11.26, −0.91] g,p = .023), the proportion of carbohydrate was not (30 arms; MD = −0.62 [−3.36, 2.12] %,p = .647). A small elevation in hunger (27 arms; MD = 4.56 [0.75, 8.37] mm,p = .021) and prospective food consumption (27 arms; PFC; MD = 5.71 [1.62, 9.80] mm,p = .008) was observed post‐exercise, but not immediately prior to the test meal (Interval:Mdn = 30 min, Range = 0–180). Conversely, a modest decrease in explicit wanting for high‐fat foods was evident after exercise (10 arms; MD = −2.22 [−3.96, −0.47] mm,p = .019). Exercise intensity (p = .033) and duration (p = .013) moderated food intake only in youth with overweight/obesity, indicating lower intake at high intensity and short duration. Overall, acute exercise does not lead to compensation of energy intake or a meaningful elevation of appetite or food reward and might have a modest benefit in youth with overweight/obesity if sufficiently intense. However, conclusions are limited by substantial methodological heterogeneity and the small number of trials employing high‐intensity exercise, especially in youth with overweight/obesity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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5. Association of Salty and Sweet Taste Recognition with Food Reward and Subjective Control of Eating Behavior.
- Author
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Schamarek, Imke, Richter, Florian Christoph, Finlayson, Graham, Tönjes, Anke, Stumvoll, Michael, Blüher, Matthias, and Rohde-Zimmermann, Kerstin
- Abstract
Sweet and salty tastes are highly palatable and drive food consumption and potentially uncontrolled eating, but it remains unresolved whether the ability to recognize sweet and salty affects food reward and uncontrolled eating. We investigate the association of sweet and salty taste recognition with liking and wanting and uncontrolled eating. Thirty-eight, mainly female (68%) participants of the Obese Taste Bud study, between 22 and 67 years old, with a median BMI of 25.74 kg/m
2 (interquartile range: 9.78 kg/m2 ) completed a taste test, the Leeds Food Preference Questionnaire to assess food reward, the Power of Food Scale (PFS) and the Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire to assess different aspects of uncontrolled eating. Better salty taste recognition predicted greater implicit wanting for high-fat savory foods (β = 0.428, p = 0.008) and higher PFS total (β = 0.315; p = 0.004) and PFS present subscale scores (β = 0.494, p = 0.002). While neither sweet nor salty taste recognition differed between lean individuals and individuals with obesity, those with greater trait uncontrolled eating showed significantly better salty taste recognition (U = 249.0; p = 0.009). Sweet taste recognition did not associate with food reward or uncontrolled eating. Better salty but not sweet taste recognition associates with a greater motivation for, but not liking of, particularly savory high-fat foods and further relates to greater loss of control over eating. Salty taste perception, with taste recognition in particular, may comprise a target to modulate food reward and uncontrolled eating. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Western diet consumption impairs memory function via dysregulated hippocampus acetylcholine signaling.
- Author
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Hayes, Anna M.R., Lauer, Logan Tierno, Kao, Alicia E., Sun, Shan, Klug, Molly E., Tsan, Linda, Rea, Jessica J., Subramanian, Keshav S., Gu, Cindy, Tanios, Natalie, Ahuja, Arun, Donohue, Kristen N., Décarie-Spain, Léa, Fodor, Anthony A., and Kanoski, Scott E.
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WESTERN diet , *ACETYLCHOLINE , *MNEMONICS , *EPISODIC memory , *BEHAVIORAL assessment , *MEMORY - Abstract
• Early life Western diet (WD) disrupts memory despite healthy diet intervention. • Early life WD yields long-lasting reductions in hippocampus cholinergic tone. • Early life WD disrupts novelty-induced hippocampal acetylcholine release. • Gut microbiome changes due to early life Western diet are reversible. • Impaired acetylcholine signaling underlies WD-induced memory deficits. Western diet (WD) consumption during early life developmental periods is associated with impaired memory function, particularly for hippocampus (HPC)-dependent processes. We developed an early life WD rodent model associated with long-lasting HPC dysfunction to investigate the neurobiological mechanisms mediating these effects. Rats received either a cafeteria-style WD (ad libitum access to various high-fat/high-sugar foods; CAF) or standard healthy chow (CTL) during the juvenile and adolescent stages (postnatal days 26–56). Behavioral and metabolic assessments were performed both before and after a healthy diet intervention period beginning at early adulthood. Results revealed HPC-dependent contextual episodic memory impairments in CAF rats that persisted despite the healthy diet intervention. Given that dysregulated HPC acetylcholine (ACh) signaling is associated with memory impairments in humans and animal models, we examined protein markers of ACh tone in the dorsal HPC (HPCd) in CAF and CTL rats. Results revealed significantly lower protein levels of vesicular ACh transporter in the HPCd of CAF vs. CTL rats, indicating chronically reduced ACh tone. Using intensity-based ACh sensing fluorescent reporter (iAChSnFr) in vivo fiber photometry targeting the HPCd, we next revealed that ACh release during object-contextual novelty recognition was highly predictive of memory performance and was disrupted in CAF vs. CTL rats. Neuropharmacological results showed that alpha 7 nicotinic ACh receptor agonist infusion in the HPCd during training rescued memory deficits in CAF rats. Overall, these findings reveal a functional connection linking early life WD intake with long-lasting dysregulation of HPC ACh signaling, thereby identifying an underlying mechanism for WD-associated memory impairments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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7. Response inhibition training as an intervention to modify liking and wanting for foods based on energy density: a proof of concept study.
- Author
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Moore, Halim, White, Melanie J., Finlayson, Graham, and King, Neil
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OBESITY risk factors , *MOBILE apps , *REPEATED measures design , *EFFECT sizes (Statistics) , *PACKAGED foods , *ENERGY density , *RESEARCH funding , *CLINICAL trials , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *REWARD (Psychology) , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *FOOD habits , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *ANALYSIS of variance , *FOOD preferences , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *COGNITIVE rehabilitation - Abstract
The ubiquity of energy-dense, processed foods has been implicated as a salient feature of the modern 'obesogenic' environment. Cognitive strategies, such as response inhibition training, have been demonstrated to reduce the hedonic value of such foods in previous studies. However, this effect has generally been inconsistent or heterogenous, depending on the outcome measure, characteristics of the sample, and the specificity of food stimuli. Characterising the extent of generalised effects may help define the application of this type of intervention in natural settings. A repeated-measures, proof-of-concept study, using mobile app-based response inhibition training (RIT) versus a control app-based activity (N = 25), was undertaken to establish the valid application of a food reward measure to assess intervention efficacy. Liking (i.e., affect) and wanting (i.e., motivation) for food stimuli categorised by energy density were taken concurrently pre- and post-training. A statistically significant reduction in explicit liking, but not implicit wanting, for foods irrespective of their energy density was observed during the RIT app-based training session relative to the control (p =.041, ηp2 =.16). However, effect sizes associated with devaluation of energy-dense relative to low calorie food stimuli, although non-significant, were higher when measured as implicitly wanting (p =.098, ηp2 =.11) than explicit liking (p =.756, ηp2 =.00). Trends in explicit stimulus evaluations were empirically discordant from implicit evaluations for low calorie foods in particular. Additional research is needed to investigate whether these trends are reproducible with larger samples, trained and novel food stimuli in outcome measures, and more comprehensive training protocols. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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8. Food reward associations with motivational eating behavior traits and body mass index in Portuguese former elite athletes.
- Author
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Carraça, Eliana V, Nunes, Catarina L, Santos, Inês, Finlayson, Graham, and Silva, Analiza M
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REWARD (Psychology) , *FOOD habits , *INTUITIVE eating , *BODY mass index , *ELITE athletes , *FOOD preferences - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Motivational eating behavior traits (i.e. eating motivations and intuitive eating) have an important role in body weight regulation, as do food reward processes. Their associations might help explain different responses to food stimulus in the current environment but have never been explored. This study's primary goal was to investigate food reward associations with eating motivations, intuitive eating dimensions and body mass index in former Portuguese elite athletes with overweight/obesity. As a first step, a cultural adaptation of the Leeds Food Preference Questionnaire (LFPQ) was created and validated in an online‐surveyed Portuguese sample. RESULTS: Step 1: Analysis from an online survey (N = 348; 69.8% female) conducted to validate the food images from the cultural adaptation of the LFPQ showed that most food images were properly recognized in terms of their fat and sweet content by the Portuguese population, except for some savory items. Step 2: Regarding our primary analysis in 94 former elite athletes with overweight/obesity, self‐determined motivations to regulate eating and (to a lower extent) more body–food congruent choices (both markers for healthier eating behaviors) were associated with more favorable food reward outcomes, as opposed to non‐self‐determined motivations. Less emotional (more intuitive) eaters presented higher implicit wanting for low‐fat sweet foods compared to more emotional eaters. CONCLUSION: These findings suggest LFPQ usefulness to evaluate food preferences and detect relevant associations between food reward and motivational eating behavior traits in former elite athletes with overweight/obesity. Health professionals are encouraged to create need‐supportive environments that foster self‐determined motivations and help individuals make healthier food choices. © 2023 Society of Chemical Industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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9. Can smartphone‐based response inhibition training elicit sustained changes in appetite, preference, and cravings for energy‐dense foods? A free‐living randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Moore, Halim, White, Melanie J., Finlayson, Graham, and King, Neil
- Subjects
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RESPONSE inhibition , *APPETITE disorders , *REWARD (Psychology) , *SMARTPHONES , *CALORIC content of foods , *COMPULSIVE eating - Abstract
Background: Food‐specific response inhibition training has been implemented as a strategy to modify food choices and reward‐related eating behaviours, but short‐term studies have produced equivocal findings. Objective: To longitudinally assess the effect of a smartphone‐based response inhibition intervention on food reward, hedonic eating drive, and cravings in a free‐living setting. Methods: 84 adults (Mage = 30.49, SDage = 13.01, 52 female) with high responsivity to food cues or overweight/obesity were randomly assigned to a response inhibition training intervention (n = 45) or a control game (n = 39) at home during a training week, followed by a week with no training. Primary analyses compared groups on measures of explicit liking and implicit wanting for food of different energy densities, food cravings, and reward‐related eating throughout this two‐week period. Results: A reduction was observed in explicit liking and implicit wanting for energy‐dense foods from baseline to post‐training independent of condition (ps <.001). These changes from baseline were sustained after a 1‐week latency period, also independent of condition (ps <.001). These effects coincided with similar observations of hedonic eating drive, tonic cravings, and control over cravings during the observation period (ps <.01). Conclusions: Although significant reductions in reward‐related appetite were observed, free‐living response inhibition training did not offer additional benefit over a control activity. Future intervention studies with observable food intake are needed to investigate which appetitive mechanisms most reliably predict eating behaviour over time. Trial Registration: Retrospectively registered with ANZCTR [ACTRN12622001502729]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Association of Salty and Sweet Taste Recognition with Food Reward and Subjective Control of Eating Behavior
- Author
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Imke Schamarek, Florian Christoph Richter, Graham Finlayson, Anke Tönjes, Michael Stumvoll, Matthias Blüher, and Kerstin Rohde-Zimmermann
- Subjects
food reward ,liking and wanting ,taste ,obesity ,eating behavior ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Abstract
Sweet and salty tastes are highly palatable and drive food consumption and potentially uncontrolled eating, but it remains unresolved whether the ability to recognize sweet and salty affects food reward and uncontrolled eating. We investigate the association of sweet and salty taste recognition with liking and wanting and uncontrolled eating. Thirty-eight, mainly female (68%) participants of the Obese Taste Bud study, between 22 and 67 years old, with a median BMI of 25.74 kg/m2 (interquartile range: 9.78 kg/m2) completed a taste test, the Leeds Food Preference Questionnaire to assess food reward, the Power of Food Scale (PFS) and the Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire to assess different aspects of uncontrolled eating. Better salty taste recognition predicted greater implicit wanting for high-fat savory foods (β = 0.428, p = 0.008) and higher PFS total (β = 0.315; p = 0.004) and PFS present subscale scores (β = 0.494, p = 0.002). While neither sweet nor salty taste recognition differed between lean individuals and individuals with obesity, those with greater trait uncontrolled eating showed significantly better salty taste recognition (U = 249.0; p = 0.009). Sweet taste recognition did not associate with food reward or uncontrolled eating. Better salty but not sweet taste recognition associates with a greater motivation for, but not liking of, particularly savory high-fat foods and further relates to greater loss of control over eating. Salty taste perception, with taste recognition in particular, may comprise a target to modulate food reward and uncontrolled eating.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Pavlovian-instrumental transfer effects in individuals with binge eating
- Author
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Wai Sze Chan and Tsun Tak Lai
- Subjects
Binge eating disorder ,Bulimia nervosa ,Food addiction ,Cue reactivity ,Food reward ,Motivational biases ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background The food addiction model of binge-eating postulates that hyperpalatable food can sensitize the reward processing system and lead to elevated cue-elicited motivational biases towards food, which eventually become habitual and compulsive. However, previous research on food reward conditioning in individuals with binge-eating is scarce. The present study examined the Pavlovian-instrumental transfer (PIT) effects in individuals with recurrent binge-eating. It was hypothesized that hyperpalatable food would elicit specific transfer effects, i.e., biased responding for the signaled food even after satiation on that food, and this effect would be stronger in individuals with binge-eating compared to healthy controls. Methods Fifty-one adults with recurrent binge-eating and 50 weight-matched healthy controls (mean age: 23.95 [SD = 5.62]; % female = 76.2%) completed the PIT paradigm with food rewards. Participants also completed measures of hunger, mood, impulsivity, response disinhibition, and working memory. Mixed ANOVAs were conducted to examine transfer effects and if they differed between individuals with binge-eating and those without. Results The group by cue interaction effect was not significant, suggesting that the specific transfer effect did not differ between groups. The main effect of cue was significant, indicating that the outcome-specific cue biased instrumental responding towards the signaled hyperpalatable food. However, the biased instrumental responding was attributable to suppressed responding in the presence of the cue predicting no reward, rather than enhanced responding in the presence of the specific food-predicting cues. Conclusions The present findings did not support the hypothesis that individuals with binge-eating would be more vulnerable to specific transfer effects elicited by hyperpalatable food, as measured by the PIT paradigm.
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- 2023
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12. Effect of Acute Exercise and Cycling Desk on Energy Intake and Appetite Response to Mental Work: The CORTEX Study.
- Author
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Thivel, David, Genin, Pauline, Fillon, Alicia, Khammassi, Marwa, Roche, Johanna, Beaulieu, Kristine, Finlayson, Graham, Chaput, Jean-Philippe, Duclos, Martine, Tremblay, Angelo, Pereira, Bruno, and Metz, Lore
- Subjects
EXERCISE physiology ,HIGH-intensity interval training ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of cognition ,MENTAL work ,FOOD consumption ,CALORIC expenditure ,HEALTH of adults - Abstract
Background: While mental work has been shown to favor overconsumption, the present study compared the effect of a cognitive task alone, followed by acute exercise, or performed on a cycling desk, on short-term food intake and appetite in adults. Methods: A total of 19 normal-weight adults randomly completed: resting session (CON), 30-minute cognitive task (CT), 30-minute cognitive task followed by a 15-minute high-intensity interval exercise bout (CT–EX), and 30-minute cognitive task performed on a cycling desk (CT-CD). Energy expenditure was estimated (heart rate–workload relationship), and energy intake (EI; ad libitum) and appetite (visual analog scales) were assessed. Results: Energy expenditure was higher in CT-EX (P <.001) compared with the other conditions and in CT-CD compared with CON and CT (P <.01). EI was higher in CON (P <.05) and CT-CD compared with CT (P <.01). Relative EI was higher in CON compared with CT (P <.05) and lower in CT-EX compared with CT, CT-CD, and CON (all Ps <.001). Area under the curve desire to eat was higher in CON compared with CT (P <.05) and CT-EX (P <.01). Area under the curve prospective food consumption was higher in CON compared with CT-EX (P <.01). Overall composite appetite score was not different between conditions. Conclusion: While cycling desks are recommended to break up sedentary time, the induced increase in energy expenditure might not be enough to significantly reduce overall short-term relative EI after mental work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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13. Microbes, oxytocin and stress: Converging players regulating eating behavior.
- Author
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Cuesta‐Marti, Cristina, Uhlig, Friederike, Muguerza, Begoña, Hyland, Niall, Clarke, Gerard, and Schellekens, Harriët
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FOOD habits , *OXYTOCIN , *GUT microbiome , *G protein coupled receptors , *REWARD (Psychology) - Abstract
Oxytocin is a peptide‐hormone extensively studied for its multifaceted biological functions and has recently gained attention for its role in eating behavior, through its action as an anorexigenic neuropeptide. Moreover, the gut microbiota is involved in oxytocinergic signaling through the brain‐gut axis, specifically in the regulation of social behavior. The gut microbiota is also implicated in appetite regulation and is postulated to play a role in central regulation of hedonic eating. In this review, we provide an overview on oxytocin and its individual links with the microbiome, the homeostatic and non‐homeostatic regulation of eating behavior as well as social behavior and stress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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14. Paediatric obesity and metabolic syndrome associations with cognition and the brain in youth: Current evidence and future directions.
- Author
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Sadler, Jennifer R., Thapaliya, Gita, Ranganath, Kushi, Gabay, Andrea, Chen, Liuyi, Smith, Kimberly R., Osorio, Ricardo S., Convit, Antonio, and Carnell, Susan
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BRAIN anatomy , *GRAY matter (Nerve tissue) , *EXECUTIVE function , *CHILDHOOD obesity , *COGNITION in adolescence , *BRAIN cortical thickness , *WHITE matter (Nerve tissue) , *NEUROINFLAMMATION , *METABOLIC syndrome , *DISEASE complications , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Summary: Obesity and components of the metabolic syndrome (MetS) are associated with differences in brain structure and function and in general and food‐related cognition in adults. Here, we review evidence for similar phenomena in children and adolescents, with a focus on the implications of extant research for possible underlying mechanisms and potential interventions for obesity and MetS in youth. Current evidence is limited by a relative reliance on small cross‐sectional studies. However, we find that youth with obesity and MetS or MetS components show differences in brain structure, including alterations in grey matter volume and cortical thickness across brain regions subserving reward, cognitive control and other functions, as well as in white matter integrity and volume. Children with obesity and MetS components also show some evidence for hyperresponsivity of food reward regions and hyporesponsivity of cognitive control circuits during food‐related tasks, altered brain responses to food tastes, and altered resting‐state connectivity including between cognitive control and reward processing networks. Potential mechanisms for these findings include neuroinflammation, impaired vascular reactivity, and effects of diet and obesity on myelination and dopamine function. Future observational research using longitudinal measures, improved sampling strategies and study designs, and rigorous statistical methods, promises to further illuminate dynamic relationships and causal mechanisms. Intervention studies targeted at modifiable biological and behavioural factors associated with paediatric obesity and MetS can further inform mechanisms, as well as test whether brain and behaviour can be altered for beneficial outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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15. Amelioration impact of gut-brain communication on obesity control by regulating gut microbiota composition through the ingestion of animal-plant-derived peptides and dietary fiber: can food reward effect as a hidden regulator?
- Author
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Jia, Wei, Peng, Jian, Zhang, Yan, Zhu, Jiying, Qiang, Xin, Zhang, Rong, and Shi, Lin
- Abstract
Abstract Various roles of intestinal flora in the gut-brain axis response pathway have received enormous attention because of their unique position in intestinal flora-derived metabolites regulating hormones, inducing appetite, and modulating energy metabolism. Reward pathways in the brain play a crucial role in gut-brain communications, but the mechanisms have not been methodically understood. This review outlined the mechanisms by which leptin, ghrelin, and insulin are influenced by intestinal flora-derived metabolites to regulate appetite and body weight, focused on the significance of the paraventricular nucleus and ventromedial prefrontal cortex in food reward. The vagus nerve and mitochondria are essential pathways of the intestinal flora involved in the modulation of neurotransmitters, neural signaling, and neurotransmission in gut-brain communications. The dynamic response to nutrient intake and changes in the characteristics of feeding activity requires the participation of the vagus nerve to transmit messages to be completed. SCFAs, Bas, BCAAs, and induced hormones mediate the sensory information and reward signaling of the host in the complex regulatory mechanism of food selection, and the composition of the intestinal flora significantly impacts this process. Food reward in the process of obesity based on gut-brain communications expands new ideas for the prevention and treatment of obesity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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16. Pavlovian-instrumental transfer effects in individuals with binge eating.
- Author
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Chan, Wai Sze and Lai, Tsun Tak
- Subjects
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COMPULSIVE eating , *BINGE-eating disorder , *REWARD (Psychology) , *BULIMIA , *FOOD consumption , *SHORT-term memory - Abstract
Background: The food addiction model of binge-eating postulates that hyperpalatable food can sensitize the reward processing system and lead to elevated cue-elicited motivational biases towards food, which eventually become habitual and compulsive. However, previous research on food reward conditioning in individuals with binge-eating is scarce. The present study examined the Pavlovian-instrumental transfer (PIT) effects in individuals with recurrent binge-eating. It was hypothesized that hyperpalatable food would elicit specific transfer effects, i.e., biased responding for the signaled food even after satiation on that food, and this effect would be stronger in individuals with binge-eating compared to healthy controls. Methods: Fifty-one adults with recurrent binge-eating and 50 weight-matched healthy controls (mean age: 23.95 [SD = 5.62]; % female = 76.2%) completed the PIT paradigm with food rewards. Participants also completed measures of hunger, mood, impulsivity, response disinhibition, and working memory. Mixed ANOVAs were conducted to examine transfer effects and if they differed between individuals with binge-eating and those without. Results: The group by cue interaction effect was not significant, suggesting that the specific transfer effect did not differ between groups. The main effect of cue was significant, indicating that the outcome-specific cue biased instrumental responding towards the signaled hyperpalatable food. However, the biased instrumental responding was attributable to suppressed responding in the presence of the cue predicting no reward, rather than enhanced responding in the presence of the specific food-predicting cues. Conclusions: The present findings did not support the hypothesis that individuals with binge-eating would be more vulnerable to specific transfer effects elicited by hyperpalatable food, as measured by the PIT paradigm. Plain English summary: Cues associated with food are known to increase one's motivation for food consumption. Such a tendency, if not diminished after satiation, may lead to excessive and compulsive food consumption. Hyperpalatable food, which refers to food high in fats, refined carbohydrates, sugar, and sodium, is believed to elevate food-consuming motivation and may lead to binge-eating behavior. Hence, the present study aimed to evaluate the effects of cues on people's motivation to seek signaled hyperpalatable food in those with or without recurrent binge-eating. Results showed that, although conditioned cues biased the choice of response towards the signaled food, this bias was due to suppressed responding in the presence of cues predicting no reward rather than increased responding in the presence of cues predicting the signaled reward. Notably, we did not find significant differences in this effect between people with binge-eating and those without, suggesting that the effects of cues on food-seeking motivation did not differ in people with recurrent binge-eating. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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17. Relation of Overweight/Obesity to Reward Region Response to Food Reward and the Moderating Effects of Parental History of Eating Pathology in Adolescent Females.
- Author
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Yokum, Sonja and Stice, Eric
- Abstract
Objective: To test whether overweight/obesity is associated with an elevated reward region response to milkshake cues and a low reward region response to milkshake receipt. To test whether the risk for eating pathology moderates the effects of weight status on the neural response to milkshake cues and milkshake receipt. Method: The current study used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine the neuronal responses of female adolescents (n = 80; M age = 14.6 ± 0.9; M BMI = 21.9 ± 3.6; 41% with a biological parental history of eating pathology) during a food receipt paradigm. Results: Females with overweight/obesity showed a greater ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), and ventral anterior cingulate (ACC) response to milkshake cues and a greater ventral striatum, subgenual ACC, and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex response to milkshake receipt than those with a healthy weight. Females with overweight/obesity plus a parental history of eating pathology showed a greater vmPFC/medial orbitofrontal cortex response to milkshake cues than those without a parental history of eating pathology and those with a healthy weight. Females with overweight/obesity and without a parental history of eating pathology showed a greater thalamus and striatum response to milkshake receipt. Conclusions: Overweight/obesity is associated with an elevated reward region response to palatable food cues and food receipt. A risk for eating pathology enhances the reward region response to food cues in those with excess weight. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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18. Eyes over stomach: companion dogs choose the larger quantity by sight, irrespective of the actual reward eaten.
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Loconsole, Maria, Regolin, Lucia, Marliani, Giovanna, Mattioli, Michela, Pietschmann, Elena, Accorsi, Pier Attilio, and Normando, Simona
- Subjects
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DOGS , *REWARD (Psychology) , *STOMACH , *VISUAL discrimination - Abstract
Domestic dogs tested in a free-choice task between two sets of food prefer that of a larger quantity. A recent study pointed out the critical role of the first trial. Dogs succeeded only after being allowed at least once to eat the selected food. Here we explore the importance of the actual experience of consuming the selected reward on dogs' capability to redirect their choice to solve numerical discriminations. Dogs tested in the 2 vs 4 and 1 vs 8 comparisons could never consume the quantity selected but always obtained a single dogs' treat. Despite never experiencing a difference in the eaten quantity, dogs discriminated between the two sets, preferring the larger. Whereas they behaved at chance at first choice, they successfully redirected their preference toward the larger set already on their second trial. We discuss our results in terms of motivational biases toward the larger quantity that can bear relevant ecological value. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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19. The Effects of Different Modalities of an Acute Energy Deficit on Sleep and Next Morning Appetitive and Compensatory Behavior in Healthy Young Adults: The EDIES Protocol.
- Author
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Saidi, Oussama, Chatain, Cyril, Del Sordo, Giovanna C., Demaria, Rémi, Lequin, Ludivine, Rochette, Emmanuelle, Larribaut, Julie, Gruet, Mathieu, and Duché, Pascale
- Abstract
Sleep is bi-directionally linked to energy balance. This crossover study design will evaluate the acute effect of a moderate energy deficit (500 kcal) induced by diet, exercise, or mixed (−250 kcal by diet and 250 kcal by exercise) on sleep and the next morning's appetitive responses. The study sample comprises 24 healthy young adults. The experimental measurements will be conducted in a naturalistic, momentary manner and partly assessed by the participants. The participants will undergo a run-in period in order to stabilize their sleep schedules and provide them with training on the study protocol and measurements. Indirect calorimetry will be used to determine their resting metabolic rate and peak oxygen consumption (VO
2 peak). Then, they will take part in a control session (CTL), followed by three energy deficit sessions in random order: a diet-induced energy deficit session (DED), an exercise-induced energy deficit session (EED), and a mixed energy deficit session (MED). All experimental sessions will be separated by a one-week washout. The participants' sleep will be monitored by ambulatory polysomnography, and the next morning's appetitive response will be evaluated via ad libitum food intake, appetite sensations, and food reward, measured by a food liking and wanting computerized test. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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20. Food Addiction
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Ahmed, Serge H., Avena, Nicole M., Berridge, Kent C., Gearhardt, Ashley N., Guillem, Karine, Pfaff, Donald W., editor, Volkow, Nora D., editor, and Rubenstein, John L., editor
- Published
- 2022
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21. All the Pringle ladies: Neural and behavioral responses to high‐calorie food rewards in young adult women.
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Banica, Iulia, Allison, Grace, Racine, Sarah E., Foti, Dan, and Weinberg, Anna
- Subjects
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REWARD (Psychology) , *YOUNG adults , *YOUNG women , *LIKES & dislikes , *FOOD habits , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *COMPULSIVE eating - Abstract
Reward processing is vital for learning and survival, and can be indexed using the Reward Positivity (RewP), an event‐related potential (ERP) component that is larger for rewards than losses. Prior work suggests that heightened motivation to obtain reward, as well as greater reward value, is associated with an enhanced RewP. However, the extent to which internal and external factors modulate neural responses to rewards, and whether such neural responses motivate reward‐seeking behavior, remains unclear. The present study investigated whether the degree to which a reward is salient to an individual's current motivational state modulates the RewP, and whether the RewP predicts motivated behaviors, in a sample of 133 women. To elicit the RewP, participants completed a forced‐choice food reward guessing task. Data were also collected on food‐related behaviors (i.e., type of food chosen, consumption of the food reward) and motivational salience factors (i.e., self‐reported hunger, time since last meal, and subjective "liking" of food reward). Results showed that hungrier participants displayed an enhanced RewP compared to less hungry individuals. Further, self‐reported snack liking interacted with RewP magnitude to predict behavior, such that when participants reported low levels of snack liking, those with a smaller RewP were more likely to consume their snacks than those with a larger RewP. Our data suggest that food‐related motivational state may increase neural sensitivity to food reward in young women, and that neural markers of reward sensitivity might interact with subjective reward liking to predict real‐world eating behavior. We investigated whether the degree to which a reward is salient to one's motivational state modulates neural sensitivity to food reward, as indexed by the Reward Positivity (RewP). Our findings suggest that neural response to food reward is associated with motivational state (i.e., hunger) and interacts with subjective food liking to predict real‐world behavior (i.e., consuming snack food). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Rats chirp with their mouth full: During an experimental meal, adult male Wistar rats emitted flat ultrasonic vocalisations upon feeding.
- Author
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Champeil-Potokar, Gaelle, Kreichati, Léa, Rampin, Olivier, Denis, Isabelle, Darcel, Nicolas, and Bombail, Vincent
- Subjects
LABORATORY rats ,REWARD (Psychology) ,RATS ,ULTRASONICS ,FOOD consumption - Abstract
Rats produce ultrasonic vocalisation (USVs) that are classified into different types, based on their average frequency. In pups 40 kHz USVs are produced upon social isolation, and in adults USVs can be associated with affective states and specific behavioural patterns (i.e., appetitive 50 kHz vocalisations of frequency range 30-100 kHz, or aversive 20 kHz vocalisations of frequency range 18-30 kHz). Generally, USVs of frequency around 50 kHz are linked to activation of brain reward pathways, during anticipation or experience of rewarding stimuli. Previous studies have described several subtypes of 50 kHz USVs, according to their acoustic properties. We asked whether USV production might be relevant to feeding behaviour. We recorded USVs from 14-week old adult rats during the satisfaction of a physiological need: refeeding following mild food deprivation (17 h overnight fast). We analysed a 10 min consummatory phase, preceded by a 10 min anticipatory phase, as a control for the experimental meal. Following identification of USV subtypes, we applied frequentist and Bayesian (Monte Carlo shuffling) statistical analyses to investigate the relationship between USV emission and rat behaviour. We found that it was not total USV quantity that varied in response to food consumption, but the subtype of USV produced. Most importantly we found that rats who feed tend to produce flat USVs of a frequency around 40 kHz. Beyond the previous reports of circumstantial association feeding-flat USVs, our observation directly correlate vocalisation and ingestive behaviour. Our study highlights that, in addition to quantification of the production rate, study of USV subtypes might inform us further on rat consummatory behaviour. Since this vocalisation behaviour can have a communicative purpose, those findings also illustrate nutrition studies might benefit from considering the possible social dimension of feeding behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Effects of pre-exercise high and low glycaemic index meals on substrate metabolism and appetite in middle-aged women.
- Author
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Miki Sakazaki, Yoshie Yoshikawa, Kayoko Kamemoto, Yusei Tataka, Yoshiki Yamada, Ching-Lin Wu, and Masashi Miyashita
- Subjects
- *
MIDDLE-aged women , *REWARD (Psychology) , *WARMUP , *GLYCEMIC index , *JAPANESE women , *APPETITE - Abstract
Few studies have examined the influence of pre-exercise meals with different glycaemic indices (GIs) on substrate oxidation and non-homeostatic appetite (i.e. food reward) in adults of various ages and ethnicities. We aimed to examine the effects of pre-exercise high and low GI meals on substrate oxidation and food reward in middle-aged Japanese women. This randomised crossover trial included fifteen middle-aged women (aged 40⋅9±6⋅5 years, mean ± SD). The participants consumed a high or low GI breakfast at 09.00 and rested until 11.00. Thereafter, participants performed a 60-min walk at 50 % of their estimated maximum oxygen uptake (11.00–12.00) and rested until 13.00. Expired gas samples were collected every 30 min prior to walking, and samples were collected continuously throughout the walking and post-walking periods. Blood samples and subjective appetite ratings were collected every 30 min, except during walking. The Leeds Food Preference Questionnaire in Japanese (LFPQ-J) was used to assess food reward at 09.00, 10.00, and 13.00 h. The cumulative fat oxidation during exercise was higher in the low GI trial than in the high GI trial (P = 0⋅03). The cumulative carbohydrate oxidation during walking was lower in the low GI trial than in the high GI trial (P = 0⋅01). Trial-by-time interactions were not found for any food-reward parameters between trials. Low GI meals elicited enhanced fat oxidation during a subsequent 60-min walk in middle-aged women. However, meals with different GIs did not affect food reward evaluated over time in the present study [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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- View/download PDF
24. β‐caryophyllene, a cannabinoid receptor 2 agonist, decreases the motivational salience and conditioning place preference for palatable food in female mice.
- Author
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dos Santos Barbosa, Lucas Antônio, Dutra, Rafael Cypriano, Moreira, Eduardo Luiz Gasnhar, and de Carvalho, Cristiane Ribeiro
- Subjects
- *
CANNABINOID receptors , *FOOD preferences , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *COMPULSIVE eating , *ADDICTIONS , *INCENTIVE (Psychology) , *INTRAPERITONEAL injections - Abstract
β‐caryophyllene (BCP) is a cannabinoid receptor CB2 agonist plant‐derived terpenoid found in different essential oil plants, including rosemary, black pepper, copaiba and cannabis. It has GRAS (generally recognized as safe) status and is approved by the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) for food use. BCP displays agonist activity on the CB2 receptor and is a potential therapeutic target in several neuropsychiatric disorders, including anxiety and drug addiction. Unlike CB1 receptors, activation of the CB2 receptors is devoid of psychotomimetic and addictive properties. In this regard, this study aimed to evaluate the effects of BCP on incentive salience ("wanting") performance and motivational properties elicited by sweetened palatable foods in female Swiss mice. After 9 days of training for incentive salience performance for a sweet reward (hazelnut cream with chocolate), food‐restricted mice received a systemic injection of BCP (50 and 100 mg/kg) before testing over 3 days. Moreover, independent groups of female mice were tested on sweet reward‐induced conditioned place preference (CPP) for 22 consecutive days. To evaluate BCP effects on the expression of seeking behaviour for sweetened food, mice received a single intraperitoneal injection of BCP (50 mg/kg) 30 min before testing on the CPP task. BCP significantly decreased the incentive performance for a sweet reward compared with the control group in a CB2 receptor‐dependent manner. Also, BCP suppressed the expression of sweet reward‐CPP. Altogether, these preclinical data demonstrate the potential role of BCP in treating disorders associated with food addiction‐like behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The orbitofrontal cortex, food reward, body weight and obesity.
- Author
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Rolls, Edmund T
- Subjects
- *
PREFRONTAL cortex , *REWARD (Psychology) , *BODY weight , *INSULAR cortex , *BODY mass index - Abstract
In primates including humans, the orbitofrontal cortex is the key brain region representing the reward value and subjective pleasantness of the sight, smell, taste and texture of food. At stages of processing before this, in the insular taste cortex and inferior temporal visual cortex, the identity of the food is represented, but not its affective value. In rodents, the whole organisation of reward systems appears to be different, with reward value reflected earlier in processing systems. In primates and humans, the amygdala is overshadowed by the great development of the orbitofrontal cortex. Social and cognitive factors exert a top-down influence on the orbitofrontal cortex, to modulate the reward value of food that is represented in the orbitofrontal cortex. Recent evidence shows that even in the resting state, with no food present as a stimulus, the liking for food, and probably as a consequence of that body mass index, is correlated with the functional connectivity of the orbitofrontal cortex and ventromedial prefrontal cortex. This suggests that individual differences in these orbitofrontal cortex reward systems contribute to individual differences in food pleasantness and obesity. Implications of how these reward systems in the brain operate for understanding, preventing and treating obesity are described. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Orbitofrontal cortex connectivity is associated with food reward and body weight in humans.
- Author
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Rolls, Edmund T, Feng, Ruiqing, Cheng, Wei, and Feng, Jianfeng
- Subjects
- *
REWARD (Psychology) , *PREFRONTAL cortex , *HUMAN body , *BODY weight , *SWEETNESS (Taste) - Abstract
The aim was to investigate with very large-scale analyses whether there are underlying functional connectivity differences between humans that relate to food reward and whether these in turn are associated with being overweight. In 37 286 humans from the UK Biobank, resting-state functional connectivities of the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), especially with the anterior cingulate cortex, were positively correlated with the liking for sweet foods (False Discovery Rate (FDR) P < 0.05). They were also positively correlated with the body mass index (BMI) (FDR P < 0.05). Moreover, in a sample of 502 492 people, the 'liking for sweet foods' was correlated with their BMI (r = 0.06, P < 10−125). In a cross-validation with 545 participants from the Human Connectome Project, a higher functional connectivity involving the OFC relative to other brain areas was associated with a high BMI (≥30) compared to a mid-BMI group (22–25; P = 6 × 10−5), and low OFC functional connectivity was associated with a low BMI (≤20.5; P < 0.024). It is proposed that a high BMI relates to increased efficacy of OFC food reward systems and a low BMI to decreased efficacy. This was found with no stimulation by food, so may be an underlying individual difference in brain connectivity that is related to food reward and BMI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Relationship between hedonic hunger and subjectively assessed sleep quality and perceived stress among university students: A cross-sectional study
- Author
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Narmin K. Abdulla, Reyad R. Obaid, Mariam N. Qureshi, Amna A. Asraiti, Maryam A. Janahi, Salma J. Abu Qiyas, and MoezAlIslam E. Faris
- Subjects
Palatable food ,Eating in the absence of hunger ,Food reward ,Eating behavior ,Pittsburgh sleep quality index ,Mental stress ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Purpose: This study examined the relationship between hedonic hunger (HH), sleep quality, and stress levels among university students in the United Arab Emirates and the Kingdom of Bahrain. Methods: We used a cross-sectional design with participants (N = 565) recruited via convenience sampling. Data were collected with a self-administered, standardized, and validated online questionnaire. HH was assessed with the Palatable Eating Motives Scale (PEMS) and Power of Food Scale (PFS), sleep quality and sleep components were assessed with the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), stress was evaluated with the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), and physical activity was examined with the International Physical Activity Questionnaire. Descriptive and analytical statistics were used to assess the relationship between HH and sleep quality and perceived stress. Results: There were positive associations between total PSQI scores and total PEMS (β = 0.14, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.06–0.25, P = 0.001) and PFS (β = 0.21, 95% CI: 0.45–1.04, P
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Rats chirp with their mouth full: During an experimental meal, adult male Wistar rats emitted flat ultrasonic vocalisations upon feeding
- Author
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Gaelle Champeil-Potokar, Léa Kreichati, Olivier Rampin, Isabelle Denis, Nicolas Darcel, and Vincent Bombail
- Subjects
vocalisation ,eating behaviour ,rats ,Monte Carlo analysis ,food reward ,behavioural sequence analysis ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Rats produce ultrasonic vocalisation (USVs) that are classified into different types, based on their average frequency. In pups 40 kHz USVs are produced upon social isolation, and in adults USVs can be associated with affective states and specific behavioural patterns (i.e., appetitive 50 kHz vocalisations of frequency range 30−100 kHz, or aversive 20 kHz vocalisations of frequency range 18−30 kHz). Generally, USVs of frequency around 50 kHz are linked to activation of brain reward pathways, during anticipation or experience of rewarding stimuli. Previous studies have described several subtypes of 50 kHz USVs, according to their acoustic properties. We asked whether USV production might be relevant to feeding behaviour. We recorded USVs from 14-week old adult rats during the satisfaction of a physiological need: refeeding following mild food deprivation (17 h overnight fast). We analysed a 10 min consummatory phase, preceded by a 10 min anticipatory phase, as a control for the experimental meal. Following identification of USV subtypes, we applied frequentist and Bayesian (Monte Carlo shuffling) statistical analyses to investigate the relationship between USV emission and rat behaviour. We found that it was not total USV quantity that varied in response to food consumption, but the subtype of USV produced. Most importantly we found that rats who feed tend to produce flat USVs of a frequency around 40 kHz. Beyond the previous reports of circumstantial association feeding-flat USVs, our observation directly correlate vocalisation and ingestive behaviour. Our study highlights that, in addition to quantification of the production rate, study of USV subtypes might inform us further on rat consummatory behaviour. Since this vocalisation behaviour can have a communicative purpose, those findings also illustrate nutrition studies might benefit from considering the possible social dimension of feeding behaviour.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Early resource scarcity alters motivation for natural rewards in a sex- and reinforcer-dependent manner.
- Author
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Williams, Alexia V., Flowers, James, Coates, Kennedy S., Ingram, Atiba, Hehn, Alexandra T., Dupuis, Molly, Wimmer, Mathieu E., Venniro, Marco, and Bangasser, Debra A.
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL depression , *MORPHINE , *GENDER differences (Psychology) , *SUBSTANCE-induced disorders , *AFFECTIVE disorders - Abstract
Rationale: Early life adversity impacts reward-related behaviors, including reward seeking for drugs of abuse. However, the effects of early stress on natural rewards, such as food and social rewards, which have strong implications for symptoms of psychiatric conditions such as major depressive disorder (MDD), are understudied. To fill this gap, we used the limited bedding and nesting (LBN) procedure to assess the impact of early resource scarcity on motivational drive for both food and social rewards in rats. Methods: Male and female Long Evans rats were reared in either an LBN environment, with limited nesting materials and no enrichment, from their postnatal day 2–9 or control environment with ample nesting materials and enrichment. As adults, they were tested for reward-seeking behavior on progressive ratio operant tasks: food reward (sucrose) or social reward (access to a same-sex/age conspecific). Results: We observed sex differences in the impact of LBN on motivation for natural rewards. In males, LBN increased motivation for both a sucrose and social reward. In females, LBN reduced motivation for sucrose but had no effect on social reward. Conclusions: These results suggest that the effects of LBN on motivation for natural rewards are both sex- and reinforcer-dependent, with males and females showing differential motivation for food and social rewards following early scarcity. Our previous data revealed an LBN-driven reduction in motivation for morphine in males and no effect in females, highlighting the reinforcer-dependent impact of early resource scarcity on motivated behavior more widely. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Appetitive Motivation and Associated Neurobiology Change Differentially across the Life Course of Mouse Offspring Exposed to Peri- and Postnatal High Fat Feeding.
- Author
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Contu, Laura, Heath, Christopher J., and Hawkes, Cheryl A.
- Abstract
Alterations in neural pathways that regulate appetitive motivation may contribute to increased obesity risk in offspring born to mothers fed a high fat (HF) diet. However, current findings on the impact of maternal obesity on motivation in offspring are inconclusive, and there is no information about the long-lasting effects in aged animals. This study examined the longitudinal effect of perinatal and chronic postnatal HF intake on appetitive motivation in young and aged offspring. Female C57Bl/6 were fed either a control (C) or HF diet before mating through to lactation. At weaning, offspring were maintained on the C or HF diet, generating the following four diet groups: C/C, C/HF, HF/C, and HF/HF based on the pre/post weaning diet. At 6 months, motivation was higher in HF/C females, but lower in male and female C/HF and HF/HF mice. By 12 months, this difference was lost, as C-fed animals became less motivated, while motivation increased in HF-fed mice. The mRNA levels of dopamine receptor 1 and 2 increased with age, while cannabinoid receptor 1 and μ-opioid receptor expression remained stable or decreased in mesolimbic and mesocortical dopaminergic pathways. Results from this study suggest that perinatal and chronic postnatal HF feeding produced opposite effects on appetitive motivation in young adult offspring mice, which was also reflected in the shift in motivation over time. These results have significant implications for patterns of hedonic eating across the life course and the relative risk of obesity at different time points. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The Relationship between Social Anhedonia and Perceived Pleasure from Food—An Exploratory Investigation on a Consumer Segment with Depression and Anxiety.
- Author
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Hyldelund, Nikoline Bach, Byrne, Derek Victor, Chan, Raymond C. K., and Andersen, Barbara Vad
- Subjects
ANHEDONIA ,SOCIAL anxiety ,GENERALIZED anxiety disorder ,PSYCHIATRIC research ,CONSUMER behavior ,PLEASURE - Abstract
Anhedonia, the diminished ability to experience pleasure, is a key symptom of a range of mental and neurobiological disorders and is associated with altered eating behavior. This research study investigated the concept of anhedonia in relation to mental disorders and the perception of pleasure from food to better understand the link between anhedonia and eating behavior. A consumer survey (n = 1051), including the Food Pleasure Scale, the Chapman Revised Social Anhedonia Scale, the Patient Health Questionnaire, and the Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale, was conducted to explore the perception of pleasure from food among people with anhedonic traits. Comparative analyses were performed between people with symptoms of depression and/or anxiety and people with no symptoms of these conditions. A segmentation analysis was furthermore performed based on three levels of anhedonia: Low, Intermediate and High anhedonia. Thus, insights into how food choice and eating habits may be affected by different levels of anhedonia are provided for the first time. Our findings showed that the 'Low anhedonia' segment found pleasure in all aspects of food pleasure, except for the aspect 'eating alone'. 'Eating alone' was, however, appreciated by the 'Intermediate anhedonia' and 'High anhedonia' segments. Both the 'Intermediate anhedonia' and 'High anhedonia' segments proved that their perceptions of food pleasure in general were affected by anhedonia, wherein the more complex aspects in particular, such as 'product information' and 'physical sensation', proved to be unrelated to food pleasure. For the 'High anhedonia' segment, the sensory modalities of food were also negatively associated with food pleasure, indicating that at this level of anhedonia the food itself is causing aversive sensations and expectations. Thus, valuable insights into the food pleasure profiles of people with different levels of anhedonia have been found for future research in the fields of mental illness, (food) anhedonia, and consumer behaviors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Reward for fat and sweet dimensions of food are altered by an acute bout of running in healthy young men.
- Author
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Yamada, Yoshiki, Hiratsu, Ayano, Thivel, David, Beaulieu, Kristine, Finlayson, Graham, Nagayama, Chihiro, Kamemoto, Kayoko, Siripiyavatana, Sirikul, Tataka, Yusei, Sakazaki, Miki, and Miyashita, Masashi
- Subjects
- *
SWEETNESS (Taste) , *FOOD preferences , *AEROBIC capacity , *REWARD (Psychology) , *LIKES & dislikes , *FAT content of food , *LOW-fat foods - Abstract
Acute moderate- to high-intensity exercise, primarily aerobic exercise, has been reported to decrease food reward in brain regions via the hedonic pathways and reduce preference for high-energy or high-fat foods. However, studies examining food reward responses to acute exercise have been limited to measuring food reward only after exercise and less frequently before and after exercise. Therefore, the changes in food reward in response to acute exercise remain unclear. This study investigated the effect of acute running on food reward in healthy young men. Fourteen young healthy men (mean ± standard deviation, age; 23 ± 2 years, body mass index; 21 ± 2 kg/m2) completed two trials (i.e., exercise and control) in a randomised, crossover design. Participants performed a 30-min running bout at 70% of maximal oxygen uptake or sitting rest before and after food reward evaluation with a computer-based food choice behaviour task tool. Food reward was assessed for foods varying in fat content and sweet taste, and there were four assessment parameters: explicit liking, explicit wanting, implicit wanting and frequency of choice of each food category (relative preference). Explicit and implicit wanting, and relative preference for high-fat relative to low-fat foods were reduced after the exercise trial compared to the control trial (trial-by-time interaction, all p ≤ 0.02). Implicit wanting and relative preference for sweet relative to savoury foods were increased after the exercise trial compared to the control trial (trial-by-time interaction, all p ≤ 0.003). These findings indicate that moderate-intensity acute running alters the reward bias away from high fat towards low fat foods and away from savoury towards sweet foods in healthy young men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Enhanced sweet taste perception in obesity: Joint analysis of gustatory data from multiple studies
- Author
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Gabriela Ribeiro, Sandra Torres, Ana B. Fernandes, Marta Camacho, Teresa L. Branco, Sandra S. Martins, Armando Raimundo, Albino J. Oliveira-Maia, and Food Reward in Bariatric Surgery Portuguese Study Group
- Subjects
obesity ,sweet taste ,taste perception ,gustation ,food reward ,hedonic hunger ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Abstract
IntroductionWhile sweet taste perception is a potential determinant of feeding behavior in obesity, the supporting evidence is inconsistent and is typically associated with methodological limitations. Notably, possible associations between sweet taste perception and measures of food reward remain undetermined.Materials and methodsWe conducted a cross-sectional analysis comparing 246 individuals with severe obesity and 174 healthy volunteers using a validated method for taste perception assessment. We included gustatory variables, namely intensity and pleasantness ratings of sour, salt, sweet, and bitter tastants, and taste thresholds assessed by electrogustometry. Reward-related feeding behavior, including hedonic hunger, food addiction, feeding behavior traits, and acceptance of foods and alcohol, was evaluated using self-rated scales for comparison with gustatory measures.ResultIn logistic regressions adjusted for age, gender, educational level, and research center, we found that a greater likelihood of belonging to the obesity group was associated with higher sweet intensity ratings (OR = 1.4, P = 0.01), hedonic hunger, food addiction symptoms, restrained and emotional eating (1.7 < OR ≤ 4.6, all P ≤ 0.001), and lower alcohol acceptance (OR = 0.6, P = 0.0002). Using principal component analysis, we found that while hedonic hunger, food addiction, and emotional eating were strongly interrelated, they were not associated with sweet intensity perception that, in turn, had a closer relationship with alcohol acceptance and restrained eating.ConclusionWe found that individuals with obesity report higher sweet taste intensity ratings than healthy controls. Furthermore, while psychological measures of reward-related feeding behavior assess a common construct, sweet intensity perception may represent a different obesity-related dimension.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. A glucokinase-linked sensor in the taste system contributes to glucose appetite
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Sandrine Chometton, A-Hyun Jung, Lilly Mai, Taylor Dal Bon, Alexa Osorio Ramirez, David W. Pittman, and Lindsey A. Schier
- Subjects
Sugar sensing ,Nutrient assimilation ,Metabolism ,Food reward ,Gustation ,Ingestive motivation ,Internal medicine ,RC31-1245 - Abstract
Objectives: Dietary glucose is a robust elicitor of central reward responses and ingestion, but the key peripheral sensors triggering these orexigenic mechanisms are not entirely known. The objective of this study was to determine whether glucokinase, a phosphorylating enzyme with known glucosensory roles, is also expressed in taste bud cells and contributes to the immediate hedonic appeal of glucose-containing substances. Methods and results: Glucokinase (GCK) gene transcripts were localized in murine taste bud cells with RNAScope®, and GCK mRNA was found to be upregulated in the circumvallate taste papillae in response to fasting and after a period of dietary access to added simple sugars in mice, as determined with real time-qPCR. Pharmacological activation of glucokinase with Compound A increased primary taste nerve and licking responses for glucose but did not impact responsivity to fructose in naïve mice. Virogenetic silencing of glucokinase in the major taste fields attenuated glucose-stimulated licking, especially in mice that also lacked sweet receptors, but did not disrupt consummatory behaviors for fructose or the low-calorie sweetener, sucralose in sugar naïve mice. Knockdown of lingual glucokinase weakened the acquired preference for glucose over fructose in sugar-experienced mice in brief access taste tests. Conclusions: Collectively, our data establish that glucokinase contributes to glucose appetition at the very first site of nutrient detection, in the oral cavity. The findings expand our understanding of orosensory inputs underlying nutrition, metabolism, and food reward.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Food Reward Alterations during Obesity Are Associated with Inflammation in the Striatum in Mice: Beneficial Effects of Akkermansia muciniphila.
- Author
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Huwart, Sabrina J. P., de Wouters d'Oplinter, Alice, Rastelli, Marialetizia, Van Hul, Matthias, de Vos, Willem M., Luquet, Serge, Cani, Patrice D., and Everard, Amandine
- Subjects
- *
REWARD (Psychology) , *GUT microbiome , *NEUROBEHAVIORAL disorders , *FOOD consumption , *BLOOD-brain barrier , *MICE - Abstract
The reward system involved in hedonic food intake presents neuronal and behavioral dysregulations during obesity. Moreover, gut microbiota dysbiosis during obesity promotes low-grade inflammation in peripheral organs and in the brain contributing to metabolic alterations. The mechanisms underlying reward dysregulations during obesity remain unclear. We investigated if inflammation affects the striatum during obesity using a cohort of control-fed or diet-induced obese (DIO) male mice. We tested the potential effects of specific gut bacteria on the reward system during obesity by administrating Akkermansia muciniphila daily or a placebo to DIO male mice. We showed that dysregulations of the food reward are associated with inflammation and alterations in the blood–brain barrier in the striatum of obese mice. We identified Akkermansia muciniphila as a novel actor able to improve the dysregulated reward behaviors associated with obesity, potentially through a decreased activation of inflammatory pathways and lipid-sensing ability in the striatum. These results open a new field of research and suggest that gut microbes can be considered as an innovative therapeutic approach to attenuate reward alterations in obesity. This study provides substance for further investigations of Akkermansia muciniphila-mediated behavioral improvements in other inflammatory neuropsychiatric disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Gut microbes and food reward: From the gut to the brain.
- Author
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de Wouters d'Oplinter, Alice, Huwart, Sabrina J. P., Cani, Patrice D., and Everard, Amandine
- Subjects
REWARD (Psychology) ,FECAL microbiota transplantation ,FOOD consumption ,BACTERIAL metabolites ,ADIPOSE tissues ,GASTROINTESTINAL hormones - Abstract
Inappropriate food intake behavior is one of the main drivers for fat mass development leading to obesity. Importantly the gut microbiota-mediated signals have emerged as key actors regulating food intake acting mainly on the hypothalamus, and thereby controlling hunger or satiety/satiation feelings. However, food intake is also controlled by the hedonic and reward systems leading to food intake based on pleasure (i.e., non-homeostatic control of food intake). This review focus on both the homeostatic and the non-homeostatic controls of food intake and the implication of the gut microbiota on the control of these systems. The gut-brain axis is involved in the communications between the gut microbes and the brain to modulate host food intake behaviors through systemic and nervous pathways. Therefore, here we describe several mediators of the gut-brain axis including gastrointestinal hormones, neurotransmitters, bioactive lipids as well as bacterial metabolites and compounds. The modulation of gut-brain axis by gut microbes is deeply addressed in the context of host food intake with a specific focus on hedonic feeding. Finally, we also discuss possible gut microbiota-based therapeutic approaches that could lead to potential clinical applications to restore food reward alterations. Therapeutic applications to tackle these dysregulations is of utmost importance since most of the available solutions to treat obesity present low success rate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Ghrelin and the Control of Energy Balance in Females.
- Author
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Smith, Andrea, Woodside, Barbara, and Abizaid, Alfonso
- Subjects
GHRELIN ,PEPTIDE hormones ,METABOLIC regulation ,FOOD consumption ,FEMALES - Abstract
Ghrelin is considered one of the most potent orexigenic peptide hormones and one that promotes homeostatic and hedonic food intake. Research on ghrelin, however, has been conducted predominantly in males and particularly in male rodents. In female mammals the control of energy metabolism is complex and it involves the interaction between ovarian hormones like estrogen and progesterone, and metabolic hormones. In females, the role that ghrelin plays in promoting feeding and how this is impacted by ovarian hormones is not well understood. Basal ghrelin levels are higher in females than in males, and ghrelin sensitivity changes across the estrus cycle. Yet, responses to ghrelin are lower in female and seem dependent on circulating levels of ovarian hormones. In this review we discuss the role that ghrelin plays in regulating homeostatic and hedonic food intake in females, and how the effects of ghrelin interact with those of ovarian hormones to regulate feeding and energy balance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Suboptimal Weight Loss 13 Years After Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass: Is Hedonic Hunger, Eating Behaviour and Food Reward to Blame?
- Author
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Nymo, Siren, Børresen Skjølsvold, Oda, Aukan, Marthe, Finlayson, Graham, Græslie, Hallvard, Mårvik, Ronald, Kulseng, Bård, Sandvik, Jorunn, and Martins, Catia
- Subjects
GASTRIC bypass ,FOOD habits ,REWARD (Psychology) ,WEIGHT loss ,LIKES & dislikes ,HUNGER ,COMPULSIVE eating ,FOOD preferences - Abstract
Purpose: Suboptimal weight loss (SWL) and weight regain (WR) following bariatric surgery are common. The exact reasons for this phenomenon remain to be fully elucidated. To compare hedonic hunger, food preferences, food reward and eating behaviour traits between participants with SWL and optimal weight loss (OWL) 13 years after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB). Materials and Method: Cross-sectional case control study where participants experiencing SWL or OWL (< or ≥ 50% of excess weight, respectively) post-RYGB were compared to a non-surgical control group matched for pre-operative body mass index. Hedonic hunger (Power of Food Scale), implicit and explicit liking and wanting for high-fat and low-fat savoury and sweet food (Leeds Food Preference Questionnaire) and eating behaviour (Dutch Eating Behavior Questionnaire, Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire and the Food Cravings Questionnaires State and Trait-reduced) were assessed. Results: In total, 75 participants were recruited from the bariatric surgery observation study (BAROBS). Disinhibition, hunger, emotional, external and restrained eating, frequency of cravings and hedonic hunger were lower in the OWL, compared with the SWL and/or control groups. Implicit wanting and explicit liking and wanting for high-fat savoury and high-fat sweet food were lower, and implicit wanting for low-fat savoury food higher, in the OWL, compared with the SWL and/or control groups. Conclusion: SWL 13 years after RYGB is associated with dysfunctional eating behaviours, increased preference and reward for high-fat food and increased hedonic hunger. Future longitudinal studies are needed to establish the cause-effect relationship between these variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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39. Appetite Changes in Weight Regain and Weight Maintenance After Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass.
- Author
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McInnis, Kurt, Brown, Jennifer L., Finlayson, Graham, Dent, Robert, and Doucet, Éric
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GASTRIC bypass ,APPETITE disorders ,FOOD habits ,REWARD (Psychology) ,WEIGHT loss ,FOOD preferences - Abstract
Purpose: Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) surgery produces significant weight loss. However, a number of patients experience weight regain years after surgery. Factors driving weight regain after surgical interventions are currently being explored. Our objective was to investigate appetite-related measures associated with weight regain after RYGB surgery. Materials and Methods: Using a cross-sectional design, 29 participants (49.6 ± 9.1 years of age; current BMI 32.4 ± 4.7 kg/m
2 , 43.6 ± 8.9 months post-RYGB) were stratified into tertiles according to weight regain per month after nadir (weight maintenance (WM), n = 9; low weight regain (LWR), n = 10; and high weight regain (HWR), n = 10). The average weight regain was, by design, significantly different between the groups (WM = 2.2 ± 2.5 kg; LWR = 10.0 ± 3.4 kg; HWR = 14.9 ± 6.3 kg regained, p < 0.05). Appetite (visual analog scales), olfactory performance ("sniffin sticks"), eating behaviors (Three Factor Eating Questionnaire), food reward (Leeds Food Preference Questionnaire), and appetite-related hormones (ghrelin, PYY, GLP-1 and leptin) were measured fasting and in response to a standardized test meal. Results: Dietary restraint was significantly higher than clinical cutoffs in WM and LWR (p < 0.05). As expected, significant time effects were noted for ghrelin, PYY, and GLP-1, but there were no group differences. Conclusion: The results suggest that appetite-related outcomes are similar across individuals who have maintained weight loss and experienced regain following RYGB. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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40. Gut microbes and food reward: From the gut to the brain
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Alice de Wouters d’Oplinter, Sabrina J. P. Huwart, Patrice D. Cani, and Amandine Everard
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food reward ,food intake ,gut microbes ,gut microbiome ,gut-brain-axis ,obesity ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Inappropriate food intake behavior is one of the main drivers for fat mass development leading to obesity. Importantly the gut microbiota-mediated signals have emerged as key actors regulating food intake acting mainly on the hypothalamus, and thereby controlling hunger or satiety/satiation feelings. However, food intake is also controlled by the hedonic and reward systems leading to food intake based on pleasure (i.e., non-homeostatic control of food intake). This review focus on both the homeostatic and the non-homeostatic controls of food intake and the implication of the gut microbiota on the control of these systems. The gut-brain axis is involved in the communications between the gut microbes and the brain to modulate host food intake behaviors through systemic and nervous pathways. Therefore, here we describe several mediators of the gut-brain axis including gastrointestinal hormones, neurotransmitters, bioactive lipids as well as bacterial metabolites and compounds. The modulation of gut-brain axis by gut microbes is deeply addressed in the context of host food intake with a specific focus on hedonic feeding. Finally, we also discuss possible gut microbiota-based therapeutic approaches that could lead to potential clinical applications to restore food reward alterations. Therapeutic applications to tackle these dysregulations is of utmost importance since most of the available solutions to treat obesity present low success rate.
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- 2022
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41. Relation of Overweight/Obesity to Reward Region Response to Food Reward and the Moderating Effects of Parental History of Eating Pathology in Adolescent Females
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Sonja Yokum and Eric Stice
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obesity ,eating disorder risk ,food reward ,fMRI ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Abstract
Objective: To test whether overweight/obesity is associated with an elevated reward region response to milkshake cues and a low reward region response to milkshake receipt. To test whether the risk for eating pathology moderates the effects of weight status on the neural response to milkshake cues and milkshake receipt. Method: The current study used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine the neuronal responses of female adolescents (n = 80; M age = 14.6 ± 0.9; M BMI = 21.9 ± 3.6; 41% with a biological parental history of eating pathology) during a food receipt paradigm. Results: Females with overweight/obesity showed a greater ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), and ventral anterior cingulate (ACC) response to milkshake cues and a greater ventral striatum, subgenual ACC, and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex response to milkshake receipt than those with a healthy weight. Females with overweight/obesity plus a parental history of eating pathology showed a greater vmPFC/medial orbitofrontal cortex response to milkshake cues than those without a parental history of eating pathology and those with a healthy weight. Females with overweight/obesity and without a parental history of eating pathology showed a greater thalamus and striatum response to milkshake receipt. Conclusions: Overweight/obesity is associated with an elevated reward region response to palatable food cues and food receipt. A risk for eating pathology enhances the reward region response to food cues in those with excess weight.
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- 2023
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42. The Effects of Different Modalities of an Acute Energy Deficit on Sleep and Next Morning Appetitive and Compensatory Behavior in Healthy Young Adults: The EDIES Protocol
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Oussama Saidi, Cyril Chatain, Giovanna C. Del Sordo, Rémi Demaria, Ludivine Lequin, Emmanuelle Rochette, Julie Larribaut, Mathieu Gruet, and Pascale Duché
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sleep efficiency ,energy balance ,exercise ,appetite ,food reward ,crossover design ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Abstract
Sleep is bi-directionally linked to energy balance. This crossover study design will evaluate the acute effect of a moderate energy deficit (500 kcal) induced by diet, exercise, or mixed (−250 kcal by diet and 250 kcal by exercise) on sleep and the next morning’s appetitive responses. The study sample comprises 24 healthy young adults. The experimental measurements will be conducted in a naturalistic, momentary manner and partly assessed by the participants. The participants will undergo a run-in period in order to stabilize their sleep schedules and provide them with training on the study protocol and measurements. Indirect calorimetry will be used to determine their resting metabolic rate and peak oxygen consumption (VO2 peak). Then, they will take part in a control session (CTL), followed by three energy deficit sessions in random order: a diet-induced energy deficit session (DED), an exercise-induced energy deficit session (EED), and a mixed energy deficit session (MED). All experimental sessions will be separated by a one-week washout. The participants’ sleep will be monitored by ambulatory polysomnography, and the next morning’s appetitive response will be evaluated via ad libitum food intake, appetite sensations, and food reward, measured by a food liking and wanting computerized test.
- Published
- 2023
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43. Why Being 'Stressed' Is 'Desserts' in Reverse—The Effect of Acute Psychosocial Stress on Food Pleasure and Food Choice.
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Hyldelund, Nikoline Bach, Dalgaard, Vita Ligaya, Byrne, Derek Victor, and Andersen, Barbara Vad
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FOOD habits ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,FOOD preferences ,REWARD (Psychology) ,PLEASURE ,SNACK foods - Abstract
The link between acute stress, food pleasure and eating behavior in humans by employing measures of individual reward mechanisms has not been investigated as of yet. Having these insights is key to understanding why many people experience a change in eating behavior when experiencing stress. Thirty-five Danes (mean age 21.71 years) underwent a stress-inducing and relaxation-inducing task based on a randomized cross-over study design. Both tasks were combined with the Leeds Food Preference Questionnaire, to investigate the effect of stress on specific measures of food reward. Furthermore, participants chose a snack, as a covert measure of actual food choice. The study found no effect on explicit liking, explicit wanting or relative preference. For implicit wanting, an effect was detected on high-fat sweet foods, with increasing scores for the stress-induced condition. Moreover, 54% chose a different snack following the stress-inducing condition. Interestingly, 14% chose to change their snack choice to no snack at all. Results suggest acute psychosocial stress can increase cravings for highly palatable foods for some, while for others an experience of loss of appetite prevails. Overall, this study points to a further understanding of why consumers have issues with making healthy food choices, ultimately affecting public health too. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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44. Predicting Food Intake from Food Reward and Biometric Responses to Food Cues in Adults with Normal Weight Using Machine Learning.
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Pedersen, Hanne, Diaz, Lars Jorge, Clemmensen, Kim Katrine Bjerring, Jensen, Marie Mølle, Jørgensen, Marit Eika, Finlayson, Graham, Quist, Jonas Salling, Vistisen, Dorte, and Færch, Kristine
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *FOOD consumption , *FOOD preferences , *REWARD (Psychology) , *FOOD , *RESEARCH funding , *BIOMETRY , *PROMPTS (Psychology) - Abstract
Background: Eating behaviors are determined by a complex interplay between behavioral and physiologic signaling occurring before, during, and after eating.Objectives: The aim was to explore how selected behavioral and physiologic variables separately and grouped together predicted intake of 8 different foods.Methods: One hundred adults with normal weight performed a food preference task combined with biometric measurements (the Steno Biometric Food Preference Task) in the fasting state. The task measured food reward as well as biometric (eye tracking, electrodermal activity, and facial expressions) responses to images of foods varying in fat content and taste. Energy intake from an ad libitum buffet of the same 8 foods as assessed in the preference task was subsequently assessed. A mixed-effects random forest approach was applied to explore how individual and combined measures of food reward and biometric responses predicted energy intake of the 8 single foods. The performance of the different prediction models was compared with the predictions from a linear model including only an intercept (naïve model) using bootstrap cross-validation.Results: Participants had a median [IQR] intake of 369 kJ [126-472 kJ] per food. Combined or separate measures of food reward or biometric responses did not predict energy intake better than the naïve model.Conclusions: We did not find that the reward or biometric responses to food cues assessed in a clinical setting were useful in predicting energy intake of single foods. However, this study provides a framework in the field of behavioral nutrition for applying machine learning with a focus on individual predictions. This is necessary on the road toward personalized nutrition and provides great potential for handling complex data with multiple variables.This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT03986619. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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45. The role of food reward in the associations between weight-based discrimination and feeding practices among caregivers of young children.
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Giuliani, Nicole R., Kelly, Nichole R., and Budd, Elizabeth L.
- Subjects
- *
REWARD (Psychology) , *DISCRIMINATION against overweight persons , *EMOTION regulation , *CHILD nutrition , *CAREGIVERS - Abstract
Certain caregiver feeding practices, including restrictive feeding for weight control, restrictive feeding for health, emotion regulation feeding, and reward feeding, are known to negatively influence short- and long-term child eating and health outcomes. Beyond body size, the precise psychosocial characteristics of caregivers more likely to engage in such feeding practices are unknown. In particular, caregivers who have experienced discrimination based on their weight, who have internalized those biased beliefs, or who find food to be very rewarding may be more likely to use restrictive or controlling feeding practices. The present study investigated the associations among experiences of weight-based discrimination, internalized weight bias, and food reward (i.e., reward-based eating drive) with use of restriction for weight control, restriction for health, emotion regulation feeding, and reward feeding in an online US sample of caregivers (M = 35.27 ± 9.08 y/o) of 2–5 year-old children (N = 305). About half (50.8%) of respondents self-identified as women and most as non-Hispanic (88.5%) and White (75.1%). There were significant positive correlations among caregivers' experience of weight-based discrimination, internalized weight bias, and use of all four feeding practices. Regression results showed that caregivers' food reward moderated the main effect of weight-based discrimination on restrictive feeding for weight control and emotion regulation feeding, such that caregivers who were high in food reward and who experienced discrimination were most likely to engage in these feeding practices. These results can inform interventions aimed at improving child food environments and health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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46. Nutrient clustering, NOVA classification, and nutrient profiling: How do they overlap, and what do they predict about food palatability?
- Author
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Rogers, Peter J., Vural, Yeliz, Flynn, Annika N., and Brunstrom, Jeffrey M.
- Subjects
- *
CALORIC content of foods , *REWARD (Psychology) , *FOOD composition , *APPETITE , *SUGAR , *LIKES & dislikes - Abstract
We compared the performance of three food categorisation metrics in predicting palatability (taste pleasantness) using a dataset of 52 foods, each rated virtually (online) by 72–224 participants familiar with the foods in question, as described in Appetite 193 (2024) 107124. The metrics were nutrient clustering, NOVA, and nutrient profiling. The first two of these metrics were developed to identify, respectively: 'hyper-palatable' foods (HPFs); and ultra-processed foods (UPFs), which are claimed to be 'made to be hyper-palatable'. The third metric categorises foods as high fat, sugar, salt (HFSS) foods versus non-HFSS foods. There were overlaps, but also significant differences, in categorisation of the foods by the three metrics: of the 52 foods, 35 (67%) were categorised as HPF, and/or UPF, and/or HFSS, and 17 (33%) were categorised as none of these. There was no significant difference in measured palatability between HPFs and non-HPFs, nor between UPFs and non-UPFs (p ≥ 0.412). HFSS foods were significantly more palatable than non-HFSS foods (p = 0.049). None of the metrics significantly predicted food reward (desire to eat). These results do not support the use of hypothetical combinations of food ingredients as proxies for palatability, as done explicitly by the nutrient clustering and NOVA metrics. To discover what aspects of food composition predict palatability requires measuring the palatability of a wide range of foods that differ in composition, as we do here. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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47. Challenges and new opportunities for detecting endogenous opioid peptides in reward
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Sineadh M. Conway, Marwa O. Mikati, and Ream Al-Hasani
- Subjects
Opioid peptides ,Enkephalin ,Dynorphin ,β-endorphin ,Drug reward ,Food reward ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
The endogenous opioid peptide system, comprised of enkephalins, endorphins, dynorphins, and nociceptin, is a highly complex neurobiological system. Opioid peptides are derived from four precursor molecules and undergo several processing events yielding over 20 unique opioid peptides. This diversity together with low in vivo concentration and complex processing and release dynamics has challenged research into each peptide's unique function. Despite the subsequent challenges in detecting and quantifying opioid peptides in vivo, researchers have pioneered several techniques to directly or indirectly assay the roles of opioid peptides during behavioral manipulations. In this review, we describe the limitations of the traditional techniques used to study the role of endogenous opioid peptides in food and drug reward and bring focus to the wealth of new techniques to measure endogenous opioid peptides in reward processing.
- Published
- 2022
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48. Dopamine Release to Food Reward in Bulimia Nervosa
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Lukas Van Oudenhove, Associate Professor
- Published
- 2018
49. The Role of Consumption and Anticipation in Dopamine Release to Food Reward
- Author
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Lukas Van Oudenhove, Associate Professor
- Published
- 2018
50. The diverse effects of brain glucagon‐like peptide 1 receptors on ingestive behaviour.
- Subjects
- *
GLUCAGON-like peptide 1 , *PEPTIDE receptors , *REWARD (Psychology) , *GASTROINTESTINAL hormones , *FOOD consumption - Abstract
Glucagon‐like peptide 1 (GLP‐1) is well known as a gut hormone and also acts as a neuropeptide, produced in a discrete population of caudal brainstem neurons that project widely throughout the brain. GLP‐1 receptors are expressed in many brain areas of relevance to energy balance, and stimulation of these receptors at many of these sites potently suppresses food intake. This review surveys the current evidence for effects mediated by GLP‐1 receptors on feeding behaviour at a wide array of brain sites and discusses behavioural and neurophysiological mechanisms for the effects identified thus far. Taken together, it is clear that GLP‐1 receptor activity in the brain can influence feeding by diverse means, including mediation of gastrointestinal satiation and/or satiety signalling, suppression of motivation for food reward, induction of nausea and mediation of restraint stress‐induced hypophagia, but many questions about the organization of this system remain. LINKED ARTICLES: This article is part of a themed issue on GLP1 receptor ligands (BJP 75th Anniversary). To view the other articles in this section visit http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/bph.v179.4/issuetoc [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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