In developed countries, where the majority of the population has enough income to afford healthy diets, a large number of the inhabitants nevertheless choose unhealthy nutrition. WHO and FAO strategies to overcome this problem are mostly based on educational means. Implicitly, this approach is based on the presumption that the main causes of the problem are ignorance and culturally acquired bad habits. It has already been shown that wild animals, evidently acting solely on instinct without cultural effects, display tendencies that may damage their longevity: they tend to avoid healthy types of caloric restriction, prefer processed to raw food, and have an excessive intake of food stimulants and proteins when available (Ostan et al., 2009). ...
We need to think about food preparation and ingestion separately from actual nutrient absorption, in...
Native American obesity and the associated health conditions are generally thought to result in part...
The debate on the relative contributions of presumptive etiologic factors in the development of obes...
In developed countries, where the majority of the population has enough income to afford healthy die...
In ethology, the science of animal behaviour, the so-called “central theorem” states that organisms ...
The quantity and quality of food needed for reproduction differs from nutritional needs for health a...
Nutrient-gene research tends to focus on human disease, although such interactions are often a by-pr...
Early influences on human ingestive behavior and other aspects of energy homeostasis can be defined ...
Behaviour and nutrition are inextricably linked. The behaviour of eating is the agency through which...
Numerous dietary strategies are currently used for the prevention of metabolic diseases and for weig...
Sequencing of the human genome has opened the door to the most exciting new era for nutritional scie...
The 9th Stock Conference acknowledged the complex background of genetic, cultural, environmental and...
Nutritional choices are affected by culture, tradition and above all by the narrative we adopt for h...
Present-day human eating behaviour in industrialised society is characterised by the consumption of ...
There is increasing interest in the proximate factors that underpin individual variation in suites o...
We need to think about food preparation and ingestion separately from actual nutrient absorption, in...
Native American obesity and the associated health conditions are generally thought to result in part...
The debate on the relative contributions of presumptive etiologic factors in the development of obes...
In developed countries, where the majority of the population has enough income to afford healthy die...
In ethology, the science of animal behaviour, the so-called “central theorem” states that organisms ...
The quantity and quality of food needed for reproduction differs from nutritional needs for health a...
Nutrient-gene research tends to focus on human disease, although such interactions are often a by-pr...
Early influences on human ingestive behavior and other aspects of energy homeostasis can be defined ...
Behaviour and nutrition are inextricably linked. The behaviour of eating is the agency through which...
Numerous dietary strategies are currently used for the prevention of metabolic diseases and for weig...
Sequencing of the human genome has opened the door to the most exciting new era for nutritional scie...
The 9th Stock Conference acknowledged the complex background of genetic, cultural, environmental and...
Nutritional choices are affected by culture, tradition and above all by the narrative we adopt for h...
Present-day human eating behaviour in industrialised society is characterised by the consumption of ...
There is increasing interest in the proximate factors that underpin individual variation in suites o...
We need to think about food preparation and ingestion separately from actual nutrient absorption, in...
Native American obesity and the associated health conditions are generally thought to result in part...
The debate on the relative contributions of presumptive etiologic factors in the development of obes...