Neurobiology of eating behavior, nutrition, and health

Author:

Stover Patrick J.1,Field Martha S.2,Andermann Mark L.3,Bailey Regan L.1,Batterham Rachel L.4,Cauffman Elizabeth5,Frühbeck Gema6,Iversen Per O.7,Starke‐Reed Pamela8,Sternson Scott M.9,Vinoy Sophie10,Witte A. Veronica11,Zuker Charles S.12,Angelin Bo13

Affiliation:

1. Texas A&M Institute for Advancing Health through Agriculture Texas A&M University College Station Texas USA

2. Division of Nutritional Sciences Cornell University Ithaca New York USA

3. Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

4. University College London London UK

5. Department of Psychological Science University of California—Irvine Irvine California USA

6. Department of Endocrinology & Nutrition Clínica Universidad de Navarra, CIBEROBN, IdiSNA Pamplona Spain

7. Department of Nutrition University of Oslo Oslo Norway

8. United States Department of Agriculture Beltsville Maryland USA

9. Department of Neurosciences Howard Hughes Medical Institute University of California San Diego California USA

10. Nutrition Research Department Mondelēz Int. R&D Saclay France

11. Cognitive Neurology, University Medical Center Leipzig Germany & Max Planck Institute for Cognitive and Brain Sciences Leipzig Germany

12. Zuckerman Mind Brain and Behavior Institute Columbia University New York New York USA

13. Cardiometabolic Unit, Clinical Department of Endocrinology, and Department of Medicine Karolinska Institutet at Karolinska University Hospital Huddinge Stockholm Sweden

Abstract

AbstractEating behavior and food‐related decision making are among the most complex of the motivated behaviors, and understanding the neurobiology of eating behavior, and its developmental dynamics, is critical to advancing the nutritional sciences and public health. Recent advances from both human and animal studies are revealing that individual capacity to make health‐promoting food decisions varies based on biological and physiological variation in the signaling pathways that regulate the homeostatic, hedonic, and executive functions; past developmental exposures and current life‐stage; the food environment; and complications of chronic disease that reinforce the obese state. Eating rate drives increased calorie intake and represents an important opportunity to lower rates of food consumption and energy intake through product reformulation. Understanding human eating behaviors and nutrition in the context of neuroscience can strengthen the evidence base from which dietary guidelines are derived and can inform policies, practices, and educational programs in a way that increases the likelihood they are adopted and effective for reducing rates of obesity and other diet‐related chronic disease.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Internal Medicine

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