Obesity and overweight are important risk factors for the development of diabetes mellitus type 2 and associated chronic diseases, and therefore, they have become serious global problems in the western and developed countries. But little is known about the neuroanatomical correlates of eating behavior and its influences on the central nervous processing in humans. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to measure the cortical activation in 12 lean healthy humans during visual stimulation with food-related and nonfood pictures after a fasting period of at least 5 h. Compared to the nonfood pictures, the food stimuli elicited a significantly greater activity in the left orbitofrontal cortex and the insular/opercular cortex bilat...
Feeding behavior is a complex phenomenon involving homeostatic signals, and non-homeostatic inputs s...
Emerging evidence from recent neuroimaging studies suggests that specific food-related behaviors con...
BACKGROUND: Neural responses to rewarding food cues are significantly different in the fed vs. fast...
Obesity and overweight are important risk factors for the development of diabetes mellitus type 2 an...
Regional brain activity in 15 healthy, normal weight males during processing of visual food stimuli ...
Research indicates that dysfunctional food reward processing may contribute to pathological eating b...
The mere sight of foods may activate the brain’s reward circuitry, and humans often experience diffi...
The mere sight of foods may activate the brain’s reward circuitry, and humans often experience diffi...
Two thirds of US adults are either obese or overweight and this rate is rising. Although the etiolog...
Two thirds of US adults are either obese or overweight and this rate is rising. Although the etiolog...
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to determine whether visual responses to food ...
The neural underpinnings of the integration of internal and external cues that reflect nutritional s...
The neural underpinnings of the integration of internal and external cues that reflect nutritional s...
The neural underpinnings of the integration of internal and external cues that reflect nutritional s...
Nutritional state (e.g. fasted vs. fed) and different food stimuli (e.g. high-calorie vs. low-calori...
Feeding behavior is a complex phenomenon involving homeostatic signals, and non-homeostatic inputs s...
Emerging evidence from recent neuroimaging studies suggests that specific food-related behaviors con...
BACKGROUND: Neural responses to rewarding food cues are significantly different in the fed vs. fast...
Obesity and overweight are important risk factors for the development of diabetes mellitus type 2 an...
Regional brain activity in 15 healthy, normal weight males during processing of visual food stimuli ...
Research indicates that dysfunctional food reward processing may contribute to pathological eating b...
The mere sight of foods may activate the brain’s reward circuitry, and humans often experience diffi...
The mere sight of foods may activate the brain’s reward circuitry, and humans often experience diffi...
Two thirds of US adults are either obese or overweight and this rate is rising. Although the etiolog...
Two thirds of US adults are either obese or overweight and this rate is rising. Although the etiolog...
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to determine whether visual responses to food ...
The neural underpinnings of the integration of internal and external cues that reflect nutritional s...
The neural underpinnings of the integration of internal and external cues that reflect nutritional s...
The neural underpinnings of the integration of internal and external cues that reflect nutritional s...
Nutritional state (e.g. fasted vs. fed) and different food stimuli (e.g. high-calorie vs. low-calori...
Feeding behavior is a complex phenomenon involving homeostatic signals, and non-homeostatic inputs s...
Emerging evidence from recent neuroimaging studies suggests that specific food-related behaviors con...
BACKGROUND: Neural responses to rewarding food cues are significantly different in the fed vs. fast...