2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2007.05.008
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Differential activation of the dorsal striatum by high-calorie visual food stimuli in obese individuals

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Cited by 617 publications
(607 citation statements)
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“…This may be of particular concern in relation to the development and maintenance of obesity given the association between consumption of high energy-dense foods and subsequent weight gain (46)(47)(48) . These findings also reflect results from recent neuroimaging studies (49)(50)(51)(52)(53) that demonstrated greater activation of reward pathways in the brain on exposure to high energy-dense food images. Coupled with attentional bias studies, these neuroimaging studies provide a further insight into how eating behaviours may be affected by potential dysregulation in areas of the brain involved in processing the rewarding properties of foods.…”
Section: Effects Of Energy Density Of Food-related Cuessupporting
confidence: 85%
“…This may be of particular concern in relation to the development and maintenance of obesity given the association between consumption of high energy-dense foods and subsequent weight gain (46)(47)(48) . These findings also reflect results from recent neuroimaging studies (49)(50)(51)(52)(53) that demonstrated greater activation of reward pathways in the brain on exposure to high energy-dense food images. Coupled with attentional bias studies, these neuroimaging studies provide a further insight into how eating behaviours may be affected by potential dysregulation in areas of the brain involved in processing the rewarding properties of foods.…”
Section: Effects Of Energy Density Of Food-related Cuessupporting
confidence: 85%
“…The authors postulated that the dysfunction in reward circuitry in obese subjects may have a distinguished role in overeating due to their altered responsiveness to tastes. Other studies (95,96) demonstrated that food motivation associated with viewing high-and low-energy food images in obese women is different from healthy weighted subjects, with an enhanced activation to high-energy food images in dorsal striatal regions (reward areas). Moreover, increasing body BMI positively correlated with BOLD signal for the highenergy condition in anterior insula (taste region), OFC (reward and secondary taste area), posterior cingulate, dorsal striatum and post-central gyrus.…”
Section: Effect Of Obesity On the Cortical Responsementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This regulation is likely to be highly complex, involving the dopaminergic system, and psychosocial factors including stress [52][53][54][55].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%