Before diving in, I'd like to address the critique that the food reward concept is a tautology or relies on circular reasoning (or is not testable/falsifiable).� This critique has no logical basis.� The reward and palatability value of a food is not defined by its effect on energy intake or body fatness.� In the research setting, food reward is measured by the ability of food or food-related stimuli to reinforce or motivate behavior (e.g., 1).� In humans, palatability is measured by having a person taste a food and rate its pleasantness in a standardized, quantifiable manner, or sometimes by looking at brain activity by fMRI or related techniques (2).� In rodents, it is measured by observing stereotyped facial responses to palatable and unpalatable foods, which are similar to those seen in human infants.� It is not a tautology or circular reasoning to say that the reinforcing value or pleasantness of food influences food intake and body fatness. These are quantifiable concepts and as I will explain, their relationship with food intake and body fatness can be, and already has been, tested in a controlled manner.�
1.�� Increasing the reward/palatability value of the diet should cause fat gain in animals and humans
Read more �
Source: http://wholehealthsource.blogspot.com/2011/10/case-for-food-reward-hypothesis-of_07.html
No comments:
Post a Comment