Killgore William D S, Yurgelun-Todd Deborah A
Affective Neuroscience Laboratory, McLean Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Belmont, Massachusetts 02478, USA.
Neuroreport. 2010 Mar 31;21(5):354-8. doi: 10.1097/WNR.0b013e32833774f7.
Men and women differ in cerebral organization and prevalence rates of eating disorders. However, no studies have yet examined sex differences in cerebral responses to the caloric content of food images. Sixteen healthy adults (eight men; eight women) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging while viewing images of high-calorie and low-calorie foods. Compared with men, women showed significantly greater activation to calorie-rich foods within dorsolateral, ventrolateral, and ventromedial prefrontal cortex, middle/posterior cingulate, and insula. Men failed to show greater activation in any cortical region compared with women, although amygdala responses were greater in men at a more liberal threshold. When viewing high-calorie food images, women seem more responsive than men within cortical regions involved in behavioral control and self-referential cognition.
男性和女性在大脑结构以及饮食失调的患病率方面存在差异。然而,尚无研究探讨大脑对食物图像热量含量的反应中的性别差异。16名健康成年人(8名男性;8名女性)在观看高热量和低热量食物图像时接受了功能磁共振成像检查。与男性相比,女性在背外侧、腹外侧和腹内侧前额叶皮层、中/后扣带回和脑岛对高热量食物表现出明显更强的激活。与女性相比,男性在任何皮质区域均未表现出更强的激活,尽管在更宽松的阈值下男性杏仁核的反应更强。在观看高热量食物图像时,在涉及行为控制和自我参照认知的皮质区域中,女性似乎比男性反应更灵敏。