Marketing Area, INSEAD, Fontainebleau, France.
Paris Brain Institute (ICM), INSERM U 1127, CNRS UMR 7225, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France.
Wiley Interdiscip Rev Cogn Sci. 2022 Jan;13(1):e1562. doi: 10.1002/wcs.1562. Epub 2021 May 11.
Everyday dietary decisions have important short-term and long-term consequences for health and well-being. How do we decide what to eat, and what physiological and neurobiological systems are involved in those decisions? Here, we integrate findings from thus-far separate literatures: (a) the cognitive neuroscience of dietary decision-making, and (b) growing evidence of gut-brain interactions and especially influences of the gut microbiome on diet and health outcomes. We review findings that suggest that dietary decisions and food consumption influence nutrient sensing, homeostatic signaling in the gut, and the composition of the gut microbiome. In turn, the microbiome can influence host health and behavior. Through reward signaling pathways, the microbiome could potentially affect food and drink decisions. Such bidirectional links between gut microbiome and the brain systems underlying dietary decision-making may lead to self-reinforcing feedback loops that determine long-term dietary patterns, body mass, and health outcomes. This article is categorized under: Economics > Individual Decision-Making Psychology > Brain Function and Dysfunction Psychology > Reasoning and Decision Making.
日常饮食决策对健康和幸福有着重要的短期和长期影响。我们如何做出饮食选择,以及哪些生理和神经生物学系统参与了这些决策?在这里,我们整合了迄今为止两个独立文献领域的发现:(a)饮食决策的认知神经科学,以及(b)越来越多的肠道-大脑相互作用的证据,特别是肠道微生物组对饮食和健康结果的影响。我们回顾了一些发现,这些发现表明饮食决策和食物消费会影响营养感知、肠道内的稳态信号,以及肠道微生物组的组成。反过来,微生物组会影响宿主的健康和行为。通过奖励信号通路,微生物组可能会影响食物和饮料的选择。肠道微生物组和饮食决策基础的大脑系统之间的这种双向联系可能会导致决定长期饮食模式、体重和健康结果的自我强化反馈循环。本文属于以下分类:经济学>个人决策心理学>大脑功能和障碍心理学>推理和决策。