Area of Neuroscience, SISSA, Trieste, Italy; Cognitive Neuroscience, Institute of Neuroscience & Medicine (INM-3), Research Centre Juelich, Germany.
School of Psychology, Australian Catholic University, NSW, Australia; Area of Neuroscience, SISSA, Trieste, Italy.
Neuroimage. 2019 Jan 1;184:130-139. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2018.09.017. Epub 2018 Sep 8.
Previous research showed that human brain regions involved in reward and cognitive control are responsive to visually presented food stimuli, in particular high-energy foods. However, it is still to be determined whether the preference towards high-energy foods depends on their higher energy density (kcal/gram), or is based on the difference in energy content of the food items (total amount of kcal). Here we report the results of an fMRI study in which normal-weight healthy participants processed food images during a one-back task or were required to inhibit their response towards food stimuli during a Go/No-Go task. High-energy density (HD) and low-energy density (LD) foods were matched for energy content displayed. Food-related kitchen objects (OBJ) were used as control stimuli. The lateral occipital complex and the orbitofrontal cortex showed consistent higher activity in response to HD than LD foods, both during visual processing and response inhibition. This result suggests that images of HD foods, even when the amount of food shown is not associated with a higher energy content, elicit preferential visual processing - possibly involving attentional processes - and trigger a response from the reward system. We conclude that the human brain is able to distinguish food energy densities of food items during both active visual processing and response inhibition.
先前的研究表明,人类大脑中涉及奖励和认知控制的区域对视觉呈现的食物刺激有反应,特别是高热量食物。然而,高热量食物的偏好是取决于它们更高的能量密度(每克卡路里),还是基于食物的能量含量差异(总卡路里量),这仍有待确定。在这里,我们报告了一项 fMRI 研究的结果,在该研究中,正常体重的健康参与者在一项 1 -back 任务中处理食物图像,或者在 Go/No-Go 任务中被要求抑制对食物刺激的反应。高热量密度(HD)和低热量密度(LD)食物的能量含量显示匹配。厨房用品(OBJ)被用作控制刺激。外侧枕叶复合体和眶额皮层在视觉处理和反应抑制过程中对 HD 食物的反应均一致高于 LD 食物。这一结果表明,即使显示的食物量与更高的能量含量无关,HD 食物的图像也会引起优先的视觉处理——可能涉及注意力过程——并引发奖励系统的反应。我们的结论是,人类大脑能够在主动视觉处理和反应抑制过程中区分食物的能量密度。