School of Human Nutrition, McGill University, Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Canada.
School of Human Nutrition, McGill University, Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Canada; Desautels Faculty of Management, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
Adv Nutr. 2023 Mar;14(2):339-351. doi: 10.1016/j.advnut.2022.12.003. Epub 2022 Dec 31.
Food advertisements are ubiquitous in our daily environment. However, the relationships between exposure to food advertising and outcomes related to ingestive behavior require further investigation. The objective was to conduct a systematic review and meta-analysis of behavioral and neural responses to food advertising in experimental studies. PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus were searched for articles published from January 2014 to November 2021 using a search strategy following PRISMA guidelines. Experimental studies conducted with human participants were included. A random-effects inverse-variance meta-analysis was performed on standardized mean differences (SMD) of food intake (behavioral outcome) between the food advertisement and nonfood advertisement conditions of each study. Subgroup analyses were performed by age, BMI group, study design, and advertising media type. A seed-based d mapping meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies was performed to evaluate neural activity between experimental conditions. Nineteen articles were eligible for inclusion, 13 for food intake (n = 1303) and 6 for neural activity (n = 303). The pooled analysis of food intake revealed small, but statistically significant, effects of increased intake after viewing food advertising compared with the control condition among adults and children (adult SMD: 0.16; 95% CI: 0.03, 0.28; P = 0.01; I = 0; 95% CI: 0, 95.0%; Children SMD: 0.25; 95% CI: 0.14, 0.37; P < 0.0001; I = 60.4%; 95% CI: 25.6%, 79.0%). The neuroimaging studies involved children only, and the pooled analysis corrected for multiple comparisons identified one significant cluster, the middle occipital gyrus, with increased activity after food advertising exposure compared with the control condition (peak coordinates: 30, -86, 12; z-value: 6.301, size: 226 voxels; P < 0.001). These findings suggest that acute exposure to food advertising increases food intake among children and adults and that the middle occipital gyrus is an implicated brain region among children. (PROSPERO registration: CRD42022311357).
食品广告在我们的日常生活环境中无处不在。然而,接触食品广告与摄入行为相关结果之间的关系仍需要进一步研究。本研究旨在对实验研究中关于食品广告的行为和神经反应进行系统评价和荟萃分析。使用遵循 PRISMA 指南的搜索策略,从 2014 年 1 月至 2021 年 11 月在 PubMed、Web of Science 和 Scopus 上搜索了已发表的文章。纳入了以人为参与者进行的实验研究。对每项研究中食品广告条件与非食品广告条件下的食物摄入量(行为结果)的标准化均数差(SMD)进行了随机效应逆方差荟萃分析。通过年龄、BMI 组、研究设计和广告媒体类型进行了亚组分析。对神经影像学研究进行了基于种子的 d 映射荟萃分析,以评估实验条件下的神经活动。有 19 篇文章符合纳入标准,其中 13 篇用于食物摄入量(n = 1303),6 篇用于神经活动(n = 303)。荟萃分析显示,与对照条件相比,成年人和儿童在观看食品广告后摄入的食物量增加,有较小但有统计学意义的影响(成年人 SMD:0.16;95%CI:0.03,0.28;P = 0.01;I = 0;95%CI:0,95.0%;儿童 SMD:0.25;95%CI:0.14,0.37;P < 0.0001;I = 60.4%;95%CI:25.6%,79.0%)。神经影像学研究仅涉及儿童,经多重比较校正后的荟萃分析确定了一个显著的聚类,即中枕叶,与对照条件相比,暴露于食品广告后活动增加(峰值坐标:30,-86,12;z 值:6.301,大小:226 体素;P < 0.001)。这些发现表明,急性接触食品广告会增加儿童和成年人的食物摄入量,而中枕叶是儿童的一个相关脑区。(PROSPERO 注册:CRD42022311357)。