Blechert Jens, Klackl Johannes, Miedl Stephan F, Wilhelm Frank H
Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Salzburg, Austria; Department of Psychology, University of Salzburg, Austria.
Department of Psychology, Division of Social Psychology, University of Salzburg, Austria.
Appetite. 2016 Apr 1;99:254-261. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2016.01.006. Epub 2016 Jan 18.
Neuroimaging studies have started to explore the role of food characteristics (e.g., calorie-content) and psychological factors (e.g., restrained eating, craving) for the human appetitive system, motivated by the significant health implications of food-choice, overeating and overweight/obesity. However, one key aspect of modern food environments, food availability, especially of high energy foods, has not been adequately modeled in experimental research. Food that is immediately available for consumption could elicit stronger reward system activity and associated cognitive control than food that is not currently available for consumption and this could vary as a function of energy density. To examine this question, 32 healthy participants (16 women) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging while passively viewing available foods - i.e. foods that could be eaten during and after the experiment - and unavailable foods of either high or low-caloric density in a 2 × 2 design. Available compared to unavailable foods elicited higher palatability ratings as well as stronger neural activation in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), amygdala, and left caudate nucleus as well as in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) - and thus structures implicated in reward and appetitive motivation as well as cognitive control, respectively. Availability effects in the caudate were mainly attributable to the high calorie condition (availability × calorie density interaction). These neuroimaging results support the contention that foods are particularly rewarding when immediately available and particularly so when high in caloric density. Thus, our results are consistent with health promoting interventions utilizing a nudging approach, i.e. aiming at decreasing accessibility of high calorie and increasing accessibility of low calorie foods in daily life. Results also imply that controlling/manipulating food availability may be an important methodological aspect in neuroscientific eating research.
神经影像学研究已开始探讨食物特性(如卡路里含量)和心理因素(如节制饮食、渴望)对人类食欲系统的作用,这是受食物选择、暴饮暴食及超重/肥胖对健康的重大影响所驱动。然而,现代食物环境的一个关键方面,即食物的可得性,尤其是高能量食物的可得性,在实验研究中尚未得到充分模拟。与当前无法食用的食物相比,随时可供食用的食物可能会引发更强的奖赏系统活动及相关认知控制,且这可能会因能量密度而有所不同。为了研究这个问题,32名健康参与者(16名女性)在被动观看可得食物(即在实验期间及之后可食用的食物)以及高热量或低热量密度的不可得食物时,进行了功能磁共振成像,采用2×2设计。与不可得食物相比,可得食物引发了更高的适口性评分,以及眶额皮质(OFC)、杏仁核、左侧尾状核和前扣带回皮质(ACC)更强的神经激活——这些结构分别与奖赏和食欲动机以及认知控制有关。尾状核中的可得性效应主要归因于高热量条件(可得性×卡路里密度交互作用)。这些神经影像学结果支持了这样的观点,即食物在随时可得时特别具有奖赏性,尤其是在高热量密度时。因此,我们的结果与利用助推方法的健康促进干预措施一致,即旨在减少高热量食物的可得性并增加低热量食物在日常生活中的可得性。结果还表明,控制/操纵食物的可得性可能是神经科学饮食研究中的一个重要方法学方面。