| Literature DB >> 27473844 |
Floor van Meer1, Lisette Charbonnier1, Paul A M Smeets2,3.
Abstract
Food decisions determine energy intake. Since overconsumption is the main driver of obesity, the effects of weight status on food decision-making are of increasing interest. An additional factor of interest is age, given the rise in childhood obesity, weight gain with aging, and the increased chance of type 2 diabetes in the elderly. The effects of weight status and age on food preference, food cue sensitivity, and self-control are discussed, as these are important components of food decision-making. Furthermore, the neural correlates of food anticipation and choice and how these are affected by weight status and age are discussed. Behavioral studies show that in particular, poor self-control may have an adverse effect on food choice in children and adults with overweight and obesity. Neuroimaging studies show that overweight and obese individuals have altered neural responses to food in brain areas related to reward, self-control, and interoception. Longitudinal studies across the lifespan will be invaluable to unravel the causal factors driving (changes in) food choice, overconsumption, and weight gain.Entities:
Keywords: Decision-making; Development; Food choice; Neural correlates; Obesity
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27473844 PMCID: PMC4967081 DOI: 10.1007/s11892-016-0773-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Diab Rep ISSN: 1534-4827 Impact factor: 4.810
Fig. 1Schematic overview of the factors affecting food decision-making which are discussed in this review. Note that external factors are outside the scope. The effects of weight status and age on factors examined in behavioral studies (food preference, food cue sensitivity, and self-control capacity) and factors examined in neuroimaging studies (food anticipation and food choice) are shown in the order in which they are discussed in the text
Key influencers of food decision-making and the strength of evidence for effects of weight status and age
| Weight status | Age | |
|---|---|---|
| Food preference | ± | + |
| Food cue sensitivity | ± | + |
| Self-control capacity | + | + |
+ denotes factor has been shown to have an effect. ± denotes evidence for this factor having an effect is conditional or inconclusive
Brain areas most consistently implicated in studies on food anticipation and food choice
| Area | Function |
|---|---|
| Ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC)/OFC | Incentive/subjective value of food |
| Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) | Self-control, anticipation of reward, monitoring of behavioral consequences |
| Anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) | Conflict monitoring, self-control |
| Amygdala | Emotion, assigns value to sensory stimuli (valence) |
| Hippocampus | Episodic memory and learning aspects of food-related behaviors such as dietary learning |
| Striatum | Reward processing, motivated behaviors, and incentive learning |
| Insula | Interoception, encoding of multimodal sensory features of foods |
| Lateral occipital complex/occipital gyrus | Visual attention, object recognition |
| Primary motor cortex/precentral gyrus | Motor coordination and planning, motivation |
| Posterior parietal cortex | Subjective value, decision-making |