BEIJING, Oct. 17 (Xinhuanet) -- Obese
people actually don't enjoy eating food and they eat more high-calorie food
in order to make up for the missing enjoyment.
The finding comes from real-time brain-imaging studies in obese and lean women by Eric Stice, PhD, of the Oregon Research Institute, and colleagues, according to media reports on Friday.
 |
|
U.S. psychology researchers reported that they were able to predict future weight gain in young women, by analyzing their reactions to milkshakes. (File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
"We originally thought obese people would experience
more reward from food. But we see obese people only anticipate more reward; they
get less reward. It is an ironic process," Stice said.
Using a technique called functional Magnetic
Resonance Imaging (fMRI), researchers examined 43 female college students aged
18 to 22 and 33 teenagers aged 14 to 18, while they drank either a chocolate
milk shake or a tasteless solution.
Cells in the brain's "reward" centers release dopamine
when people eat, causing that feeling of pleasure, researchers explain.
The brain scans showed that activity in the
brain's dorsal striatum area was much weaker in weighty women. After a year,
however, participants who displayed the blunt response were more likely to have
put on weight.
"The research reveals obese people may have fewer dopamine
receptors, so they overeat to compensate for this reward deficit," said Stice,
who has studied eating disorders and obesity for almost two decades.
Although past research has shown that biological
factors play a major part in obesity, the study is one of the first to
positively identify factors that increase people's weight gain risk in the
future.
The results, said Stice, are key for understanding
weight gain, and to helping at-risk individuals.
(Agencies)