BusinessMirror
  • News
    • News
    • Top News
    • Regions
    • Nation
    • World
    • Asia Today
  • Business
    • Business
    • Agri-Commodities
    • Asean Economic Community
    • Banking & Finance
    • Companies
    • Economy
    • Entrepreneur
    • Executive Views
    • Export Unlimited
    • Harvard Management Update
    • Monday Morning
    • Mutual Funds
    • Stock Market Outlook
    • The Integrity Initiative
  • Sports
  • Opinion
    • Opinion
    • Columns
    • Editorial
    • Editorial cartoon
  • Life
    • Life
    • Art
    • Design&Space
    • Digital Life
    • Journey
    • Motoring
    • 360° Review
    • Property
    • Show
    • Tech
    • Tourism
    • Y2Z
  • Features
    • Biodiversity
    • Education
    • Envoys & Expats
    • Explainer
    • Faith
    • Green
    • Health & Fitness
    • Mission: PHL
    • Our Time
    • Perspective
    • Photo Gallery
    • Science
    • Today in History
    • Tony&Nick
    • When I Was 25
    • Wine & Dine
  • BMPlus
    • BMPlus
    • SoundStrip
    • Live & In Quarantine
    • Bulletin Board
    • Marketing
    • Public Service
    • CSR
  • The Broader Look

Today’s front page, Monday, September 25, 2023

Subscribe
BusinessMirror
BusinessMirror
  • News
    • News
    • Top News
    • Regions
    • Nation
    • World
    • Asia Today
  • Business
    • Business
    • Agri-Commodities
    • Asean Economic Community
    • Banking & Finance
    • Companies
    • Economy
    • Entrepreneur
    • Executive Views
    • Export Unlimited
    • Harvard Management Update
    • Monday Morning
    • Mutual Funds
    • Stock Market Outlook
    • The Integrity Initiative
  • Sports
  • Opinion
    • Opinion
    • Columns
    • Editorial
    • Editorial cartoon
  • Life
    • Life
    • Art
    • Design&Space
    • Digital Life
    • Journey
    • Motoring
    • 360° Review
    • Property
    • Show
    • Tech
    • Tourism
    • Y2Z
  • Features
    • Biodiversity
    • Education
    • Envoys & Expats
    • Explainer
    • Faith
    • Green
    • Health & Fitness
    • Mission: PHL
    • Our Time
    • Perspective
    • Photo Gallery
    • Science
    • Today in History
    • Tony&Nick
    • When I Was 25
    • Wine & Dine
  • BMPlus
    • BMPlus
    • SoundStrip
    • Live & In Quarantine
    • Bulletin Board
    • Marketing
    • Public Service
    • CSR
  • The Broader Look
  • Science

In overweight teens, food ads appeal to mouth and brain

  • Los Angeles Times
  • May 23, 2015
  • 2 minute read

WHEN a sitcom’s laugh track stops and the camera pans seductively up the height of a glistening bacon cheeseburger, the teen brain snaps to attention—especially if that brain sits atop a body that carries excess fat, a new study says.

In teens with higher proportions of body fat, the brain’s pleasure centers respond more robustly to fast-food advertising than they do in leaner teens, researchers have found. Even the regions of the brain that anticipate and process fast food’s sensory qualities send up a more robust response in fattier teens than in those with less fat.

The finding, published on Thursday in the journal Cerebral Cortex, suggests the intriguing possibility that adolescents on a trajectory toward adult obesity “may simulate eating behaviors” when they are visually prompted by advertising, the study authors said. That “may then contribute to the enactment of the behavior itself,” they added. Repeated over time, those responses may all conspire to make weight loss harder later in life, they surmised.

CBS’s The Big Bang Theory provided the pretext for researchers at Dartmouth College’s Psychology and Brain Sciences Department to show a group of 40 young teens (12 to 17 years old) a little over 11 minutes’ worth of advertising.

A functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging scanner observed the subjects’ brain responses to 24 advertisements—half featuring burgers, pizzas and chicken sandwiches marketed by fast-food giants, and half featuring such non-food products as laundry detergent, cars and insurance.

Despite subjects’ rating the advertisements roughly equally exciting, the teens’ brain scans found that, irrespective of body composition, they found the food advertisements more likely to arouse regions involved in attention, motivation, reward and pleasure.

But researchers found that while watching food ads, there was a clear correlation between a subject’s degree of body fat and his or her activation in two key nodes of those circuits—the left hemisphere’s orbital frontal cortex and the right hemisphere’s insula—as well as in the sensorimotor regions that process sensation from and plan movements of the lips, jaw and tongue.

The authors suggest that, in addition to having uncovered a possible neural mechanism that reinforces unhealthy eating habits, they may also have pointed to a strategy for promoting healthy long-term eating habits: stop watching the ads while enjoying The Big Bang Theory (and its ilk).

For teenagers increasingly watching television where, when and however they like, that might already be second nature.

Los Angeles Times/TNS

0
0
0
0
Share 0
Tweet 0
Pin it 0
Share 0

Know more

Know more
  • 2 min
  • Science

DOST chief represents PHL at G77, China Summit in Havana, Cuba

  • BusinessMirror
  • September 24, 2023
Know more
  • 2 min
  • Science

PHL students bag medals in 35th International Olympiad in Informatics in Hungary

  • Jacqueline R. Parairo | S&T Media Service
  • September 24, 2023
Know more
  • 2 min
  • Science

Searca leads project to boost climate resilience in PHL

  • BusinessMirror
  • September 24, 2023
Know more
  • 2 min
  • Science

DOST tech provides safe drinking water

  • Jacqueline R. Parairo | S&T Media Service
  • September 24, 2023
Know more
  • 2 min
  • Science

US researchers engineered bacteria that can break down plastics in oceans

  • Manuel Cayon
  • September 24, 2023
Know more
  • 2 min
  • Science

British scientist, who cloned Dolly the Sheep, dies at 79

  • Associated Press
  • September 17, 2023
Know more
  • 2 min
  • Science

DOST, MMSU launch ₧12.7M tech biz incubator

  • BusinessMirror
  • September 17, 2023
Know more
  • 2 min
  • Science

14 new career scientists take their oath

  • BusinessMirror
  • September 17, 2023
Know more
  • 2 min
  • Science

DOST-PCAARRD, PCA launch 7 coconut hybridization R&D projects

  • Rosemarie A. de Castro and Edmerson Z. Calungsod | S&T Media Service
  • September 17, 2023
Know more
  • 3 min
  • Science

Study: Earth outside its ‘safe operating space for humanity’

  • Seth Borenstein | AP Science Writer
  • September 17, 2023
Know more
  • 4 min
  • Explainer
  • Science

What to know about the successful rescue of a US researcher who was trapped in a deep Turkish cave

  • SUZAN FRASER | The Associated Press
  • September 13, 2023
Know more
  • 3 min
  • Science

‘A perfect venue where science, art merge’

  • Lyn Resurreccion | Photos from DOST-FPRDI
  • September 10, 2023
Know more
  • 3 min
  • Science

‘Impact assessment crucial in sustainable development’

  • Karl Vincent S. Mendez | S&T Media Service
  • September 10, 2023
Know more
  • 2 min
  • Science

SciCommPh, Searca forge partnership to promote S&T research, innovations

  • Edwin Galvez
  • September 10, 2023
Know more
  • 2 min
  • Science

Beyond Einstein: Filipina physicist investigates exotic subatomic particles

  • BusinessMirror
  • September 10, 2023
Know more
  • 4 min
  • Science

DOST partners with US firms via US-Asean Business Council

  • Lyn Resurreccion
  • September 3, 2023
Know more
  • 1 min
  • Science

Rare blue supermoon dazzles stargazers around the globe

  • Marcia Dunn / AP Aerospace Writer
  • September 3, 2023
Know more
  • 2 min
  • Science

PhilSA receives support from DFNN for natl space capacity building

  • BusinessMirror
  • September 3, 2023
Know more
  • 4 min
  • Science

Space junk will increase with future missions–but no one’s in charge of cleaning up

  • BusinessMirror
  • September 3, 2023
Know more
  • 3 min
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Top News
  • World

India launches a spacecraft to study the sun after successful landing near the moon’s south pole

  • ASHOK SHARMA and AIJAZ HUSSAIN / The Associated Press
  • September 3, 2023

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Subscribe

BusinessMirror
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Podcast
  • Text-Only Homepage

Input your search keywords and press Enter.