Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
939843 | Appetite | 2011 | 8 Pages |
Human brain imaging studies demonstrate distributed activation of limbic, paralimbic and sensory systems to food and food-associated cues. Activity in this circuit may be modulated by internal factors, such as hunger, and cognitive factors. Anticipation to eat is one such factor, which likely impacts consummatory behavior. Here, the neural substrates of food expectancy were identified in 10 healthy male participants who underwent two whole-brain functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging scans on separate days. Fasted subjects viewed images of food and scenery, in two counterbalanced states. During one condition, subjects were ‘expecting’ to eat right after the scan and during the other they were ‘not expecting’ to eat for 1 h after the scan. Food pictures compared with scenery yielded bilateral activation in visual areas as well as in the left insula and amygdala in both conditions. The left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, hippocampus and putamen were additionally activated in the ‘not expecting’ condition while right orbitofrontal cortex activity was enhanced in the ‘expecting’ condition. These data suggest that cognitive manipulations affect the response to food cues in the prefrontal cortex, in areas involved in the planning and control of motivated behaviors, while the amygdala and insula responded equally in both conditions, consistent with a more basic role in homeostatically driven appetitive behavior.
Research highlights► Food expectancy was examined with functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging. ► Visual cues were presented in 2 states: expecting to eat and not expecting to eat. ► Food stimuli recruited areas regulating basic energy homeostasis (amygdala/insula). ► Expectancy affected response to food cues in the dorsolateral/orbitofrontal cortex. ► These cortical regions participate in the planning/control of motivated behaviors.