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Junk Food Ads Activate Reward Regions in Teens’ Brains

by Kathy Jones on Sep 11 2014 9:12 PM

 Junk Food Ads Activate Reward Regions in Teens’ Brains
Food commercials tend to ‘get under the skin’ of adolescents by activating reward regions in their brain when they are watching the ads, which could in turn lead to weight gain and obesity as it makes the teens more likely of consuming such food products, a new study reveals.
In the first prospective longitudinal study to investigate neural response to unhealthy food commercials, Oregon Research Institute (ORI) scientists Sonja Yokum, Ph.D. and Eric Stice, Ph.D., in collaboration with colleagues from the University of Michigan, the Yale Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity, and Duke University used functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) to scan 30 adolescents (14-17 years old) while they watched the television show "Mythbusters." The television show included 20 food commercials and 20 non-food commercials that are frequently advertised to adolescents. Yokum's team found that adolescents showing elevated responses in reward regions to food commercials gained more weight over one year follow-up compared to those with less activation in these brain regions. The magnitude of these effects is much larger than the effects for established risk factors for future weight gain, such as parental obesity.

"This research tells us how food commercials may be negatively impacting teens between the ages of 14 and 17 at-risk for obesity," noted Yokum. "This is important to consider in the debate about whether to restrict food advertising for unhealthy foods to young teens."

It will be important to replicate this study with larger samples, but this finding is an important contribution to the literature. This research suggests there are individual differences in neural vulnerability to food commercials that appear to identify youth at risk for excess weight gain. In combination with established risk factors of weight gain during adolescence such as sedentary behavior and parental obesity, elevated reward-response to commercials may be an important contributor and a potential target for prevention and intervention programs.



Source-Eurekalert


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