4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

The functional human neuroanatomy of food pleasure cycles

Journal

PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR
Volume 106, Issue 3, Pages 307-316

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2012.03.023

Keywords

Pleasure cycle; Satiety; Satiation; Hedonic; Pleasure; Food; Multimodal integration; Insula; Operculum; Orbitofrontal cortex; Cingulate cortex; Wanting; Liking; Learning

Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust Funding Source: Medline

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Food ensures our survival and is a potential source of pleasure and general well-being. In order to survive, the human brain is required to optimize the resource allocation such that rewards are pursued when relevant. This means that food intake follows a similar cyclical time course to other rewards with phases related to expectation, consummation and satiety. Here we develop a multilevel model for the full cycle of eating behavior based on the evidence for the brain networks and mechanisms initiating, sustaining and terminating the various phases of eating. We concentrate on how the underlying reward mechanisms of wanting, liking and learning lead to how human food intake is governed by both hedonic and homeostatic principles. We describe five of the main processing principles controlling food intake: hunger and attentional signal processing; motivation-independent discriminative processing; reward representations: learning-dependent multimodal sensory representations and hedonic experience. Overall, the evidence shows that while human food intake is complex, we are making progress in understanding the underlying mechanisms and that the brain networks supporting the food pleasure cycle are remarkably similar to those underlying the processing of other rewards. (C) 2012 Published by Elsevier Inc.

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