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Neural correlates of restrained eaters' high susceptibility to food cues: An fMRI study
Yu Wang1,2; Debo Dong3; Jackson Todd1,2; Jie Du4; Zhou Yang1,2; Hui Lu5; Hong Chen1,2
2016-09-19
Source PublicationNeuroscience Letters
ISSN0304-3940
Volume631Pages:56-62
Abstract

Many studies have reported that specific susceptibility to food cues plays an important role in disordered eating behavior. However, whether restraint status modulates the neural bases of attentional bias to different types of food cues remains unknown. Thus, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was conducted in individuals (12 restraint eaters, 12 unrestraint eaters) exposed to high/low-energy food and neutral images while performing a two-choice oddball task. The results indicated that restrained eaters responded more quickly to high-energy food images than to neutral and low-energy food images. More notably, compared with unrestrained eaters, restrained eaters showed faster reaction times, hyperactivation in a much wider array of reward (e.g., insula/orbitofrontal cortex), attention (superior frontal gyrus) and visual processing (e.g., superior temporal gyrus) regions, and hypo-activation in cognitive control areas (e.g., anterior cingulate) in response to high-energy food cues. Furthermore, among restrained eaters, the longest reaction times were found for low-energy food images, and activation of the attention and visual-related cortex (e.g., superior parietal gyrus) in the low–neutral contrast condition was significantly stronger than in unrestrained eaters. These findings contribute to our understanding of susceptibility to food cues:in addition to the special sensitivity (attentional bias)to high-energy food images, restrained eaters may also be more sensitive (allocate more attentional resources) to low-energy food images. These potential neural bases of restrained eaters may help clarify why dieting to lose or maintain weight is so often unsuccessful.

KeywordRestrained Eating Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Susceptibility Attentional Bias Food Cues
DOI10.1016/j.neulet.2016.08.017
Indexed BySSCI
Language英語English
WOS Research AreaNeurosciences & Neurology
WOS SubjectNeurosciences
WOS IDWOS:000384786600010
PublisherELSEVIER IRELAND LTD, ELSEVIER HOUSE, BROOKVALE PLAZA, EAST PARK SHANNON, CO, CLARE, 00000, IRELAND
Scopus ID2-s2.0-84982111992
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Document TypeJournal article
CollectionDEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY
Corresponding AuthorYu Wang; Hong Chen
Affiliation1.Key Laboratory of Cognition and Personality (SWU), Ministry of Education, Chongqing, China
2.Faculty of Psychology, Southwest University (SWU), Chongqing, China
3.School of Life Science and Technology, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, Chengdu, China
4.Faculty of Social Sciences, VU University Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
5.Institute of Developmental Psychology, School of Psychology, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Yu Wang,Debo Dong,Jackson Todd,et al. Neural correlates of restrained eaters' high susceptibility to food cues: An fMRI study[J]. Neuroscience Letters, 2016, 631, 56-62.
APA Yu Wang., Debo Dong., Jackson Todd., Jie Du., Zhou Yang., Hui Lu., & Hong Chen (2016). Neural correlates of restrained eaters' high susceptibility to food cues: An fMRI study. Neuroscience Letters, 631, 56-62.
MLA Yu Wang,et al."Neural correlates of restrained eaters' high susceptibility to food cues: An fMRI study".Neuroscience Letters 631(2016):56-62.
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