As research on the role of reward/palatability in obesity continues to accelerate, interesting new papers are appearing weekly. Here is a roundup of review papers I've encountered in the last three months. These range from somewhat technical to very technical, but I think they should be mostly accessible to people with a background in the biological sciences.
Food and Drug Reward: Overlapping Circuits in Human Obesity and Addiction
Written by Dr. Nora D. Volkow and colleagues. This paper describes the similarities between the mechanisms of obesity and addiction, with a focus on human brain imaging studies. Most researchers don't think obesity is an addiction per se, but the mechanisms (e.g., brain areas important for reward) do seem to overlap considerably. This paper is well composed and got a lot of media attention. Dr. Volkow is the director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, a branch of the National Institutes of Health. The NIH is the main source of biomedical research funding in the US, and also conducts its own research.
Here's a quote from the paper:
Read more »
Labels
April fool's
archaeology
book review
cancer
Cardiovascular disease
celiac
cholesterol
cob
dementia
dental health
diabetes
diet
disease
diseases of civilization
environment
evolution
exercise
fat-soluble vitamins
fats
Food reward
French paradox
genetics
gluten
gout
hormesis
hyperphagia
hypertension
infection
Inuit
Kitava
Kuna
lard
lectins
leptin
liver
low-carb
Masai
meditation
metabolic syndrome
minerals
native diet
natural building
nutritionism
overweight
paleolithic diet
phytic acid
Pima
presentations
real food
research bloopers
salad
San
sleep
smoking
soup stock
success stories
superstimuli
thrift
thyroid
Tokelau
yogurt
0 comments:
Post a Comment