(no title)
dingfeng_quek | 9 years ago
Western diet is associated with poorer inhibition of wanting for palatable snack foods when sated T.N. ATTUQUAYEFIO1, R.J. STEVENSON1, R.A. BOAKES2, M.J. OATEN3, M.R. YEOMANS4, M MAHMUT1, H.M. FRANCIS1 1Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia/2University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia/3Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia/4University of Sussex, Sussex, United Kingdom Animal data indicate that hippocampal function is impaired by the increased consumption of a Western-style diet, with potential consequences for energy regulation. Based on such data, it has been argued that consumption of a Western-style diet impairs the ability of the hippocampus to inhibit retrieval of pleasant-food related memories in the presence of food cues, when sated. We tested this in healthy human participants (N = 94, Mage = 20.3, MBMI = 22.3) who varied in their habitual consumption of a Western-style diet .Verbal paired associate (VPA) learning, a known hippocampal-dependent process, liking and wanting ratings of snack foods were assessed first when participants were hungry, then when sated. Stepwise multiple regression analyses evaluated found that Western-style diet was associated with a slower VPA learning rate and a smaller reduction in wanting for snacks from before to after lunch. The latter was also strongly related to VPA learning rate, suggesting that wanting for foods has a memory-related component and would therefore likely involve the hippocampus. Further, it shows that greater consumption of a Western-style diet is associated with poorer inhibition of memories for highly palatable food when sated. This is the one of the first translational pieces of evidence from animal data showing the impact of a Western-style diet on both hippocampal-related memory and inhibition in humans.
Supported By: Macquarie University
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Above is what I found on the conference site. I was also unable to find the paper. I agree that sciencebulletin didn't do a good job reporting on this.
On the other hand, this is not novel in any way, and there is already substantial literature on this topic that suggests the same thing. If the topic is of interest to others, perhaps the older papers, or a list of them, should be posted instead.
simonster|9 years ago