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Obese teens dig food ads

It’s not just your child’s diet, but the ads he is watching on TV that can make him overeat
A study has found that TV food commercials disproportionately stimulate the brains of overweight teenagers, including the regions that control pleasure, taste and most surprisingly the mouth, suggesting they mentally simulate unhealthy eating habits, reports sciencedaily.com.
Thinking good thoughts
The findings suggest such habits may make it difficult to lose weight later in life and that dieting efforts should not only target the initial desire to eat tempting food, but the subsequent thinking about actually tasting and eating it — in other words, you should picture yourself munching a salad rather than a cheeseburger.
The study appears in the journal Cerebral Cortex. The study included researchers from Dartmouth College’s Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences and the Norris Cotton Cancer Center at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center and Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth.
More TV shows equals more obesity
The prevalence of food advertising and adolescent obesity has increased dramatically over the past 30 years, and research has linked the number of television shows viewed during childhood with greater risk for obesity. In particular, considerable evidence suggests that exposure to food marketing promotes eating habits that contribute to obesity.
Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, the Dartmouth researchers examined the brain’s responses to two dozen fast food commercials and non-food commercials in overweight and healthy-weight adolescents ages 12-16.
The commercials were embedded within an age-appropriate show, The Big Bang Theory, so the participants were unaware of the study’s purpose. The results show that in all the adolescents, the brain regions involved in attention and focus (occipital lobe, precuneus, superior temporal gyri and right insula) and in processing rewards (nucleus accumbens and orbitofrontal cortex) were more strongly active while viewing food commercials than non-food commercials. Also, adolescents with higher body fat showed greater reward-related activity than healthy weight teens in the orbitofrontal cortex and in regions associated with taste perception.
The most surprising finding was that the food commercials also activated the overweight adolescents’ brain region that controls their mouths. This region is part of the larger sensory system that is important for observational learning.
“This finding suggests the intriguing possibility that overweight adolescents mentally simulate eating while watching food commercials,” says lead author Kristina Rapuano, a graduate student in Dartmouth’s Brain Imaging Lab.
“These brain responses may demonstrate one factor whereby unhealthy eating behaviors become reinforced and turn into habits that potentially hamper a person’s ability to lose weight later in life.”
( Source : www.sciencedaily.com )
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