(Press-News.org) VIDEO:
In this JoVE video article, a set of methods to measure food-related motivation and values are described in JoVE's peer-reviewed video article format.
Click here for more information.
March 19, 2014 —Researchers at the University of Cambridge have developed a novel method for evaluating the treatment of obesity-related food behavior. In an effort to further scientific understanding of the underlying problem, they have published the first peer-reviewed video of their technique in JoVE, the Journal of Visualized Experiments.
In the video, the authors demonstrate their means of objectively studying the drivers and mechanisms of overconsumption in humans. To do this, they assesses their subject's willingness to work or pay for food, and they simultaneously track the corresponding brain activity using an MRI scanner.
"We present alternative ways of exploring attitudes to food by using indirect, objective measures—such as measuring the amount of energy exerted to obtain or view different foods, as well as determining brain responses during the anticipation and consumption of desirable foods," said the lab's principal investigator, Dr. Paul Fletcher. He and his colleagues use participant hand-grip intensity (referred to as "grip force" in the video) to calculate the motivation for a given food reward.
According to Dr. Fletcher, typical approaches for evaluating anti-obesity type drugs rely on more subjective methods—like having test subjects self-report their ratings of hunger and cravings.
"When a person is asked how much they subjectively desire a food, they may feel pressured to give a 'correct' rather than a true answer," said Dr. Fletcher, "[Our] grip force task may, under certain circumstances, present a more accurate reflection of what they really want."
Dr. Fletcher and his colleagues brought the technique to JoVE after using it in their earlier publication, "Food images engage subliminal motivation to seek food," published in 2011. They decided to publish a video capturing the protocol "Because it offered the opportunity to demonstrate the methods more fully," he said.
In the video, Dr. Fletcher expands on the purpose of publishing the method with JoVE. "Individuals new to the technique may struggle because there aren't many examples of grip-force tasks published in the literature, and there are no full and clear descriptions of how to design and set up the tasks," he said.
With rising concerns surrounding obesity, researchers can use the technique presented in the JoVE video to determine the efficacy of a potential emerging market in anti-obesity medicine.
INFORMATION:
About JoVE, The Journal of Visualized Experiments:
JoVE, the Journal of Visualized Experiments, is the first and only PubMed/MEDLINE-indexed, peer-reviewed journal devoted to publishing scientific research in a video format. Using an international network of videographers, JoVE films and edits videos of researchers performing new experimental techniques at top universities, allowing students and scientists to learn them much more quickly. As of March 2014, JoVE has published video-protocols from an international community of more than 9,300 authors in the fields of biology, medicine, chemistry, and physics.
URL: www.jove.com END
Understanding binge eating and obesity
A key challenge in evaluating anti-obesity treatment is determining how to objectively measure a person's desire to eat; with concerns about obesity on the rise, a research team from the University of Cambridge shares a possible solution
2014-03-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
101 liver cancer drug candidates pave the way to personalized medicine
2014-03-19
The heart disease drug perhexiline is one of 101 compounds predicted to prevent cancer growth in most patients suffering from our most common liver cancer, HCC. This is an outcome from a novel simulation-based approach using personal sets of proteins of six HCC patients.
"This is the first time personalized models have been used to find and evaluate new potential drugs," says Professor Jens Nielsen at Chalmers University of Technology.
--
Our most common liver cancer, Hepatocellular carcinoma, HCC, causes more than half a million deaths worldwide every year. If the ...
Gut bacteria can cause life-threatening infections in preterm babies
2014-03-19
Babies born prematurely are surviving in increasing numbers. But many withstand complications of early birth only to suffer late-onset sepsis — life-threatening bloodstream infections that strike after infants reach 72 hours of age.
While early-onset sepsis often is caused by pathogens acquired from the amniotic sac or birth canal, the causes of late-onset sepsis have been far less clear.
But now, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have discovered that preterm babies' guts harbor infectious microbes that can cause late-onset sepsis.
The ...
Drinking alcohol several times a week increases the risk of stroke mortality
2014-03-19
Consuming alcohol more frequently than twice a week increases the risk of stroke mortality in men, according to a study carried out at the University of Eastern Finland. The results show that the effects of alcohol are not limited to the amount consumed, but also the frequency of drinking matters. The results were published in Acta Neurologica Scandinavica on 8 March.
Excessive consumption of alcohol is associated with a variety of different diseases. The relationship between alcohol consumption and ischaemic stroke shows a J curve pattern, which means that in people ...
GPS also helps to analyze global water resources
2014-03-19
This news release is available in German. FRANKFURT. WaterGAP (Water Global Assessment and Prognosis) is a hydrological model used to model water shortage, groundwater depletion, and floods and droughts (e.g. as impacted by climate change) over the land area of the globe. The Frankfurt hydrologist Prof. Petra Döll has examined how good a fit this model provides, using GPS observations and data from the GRACE satellite, which measures the gravitational field of the Earth. The study, published in the current issue of the scientific journal Surveys in Geophysics indicates ...
Rewrite the textbooks on water's surface tension
2014-03-19
Researchers from the University of Melbourne and University of Sydney are confident their new reaserach results will make significant differences to the calculations of surface tension of water used by the next generation of atmospheric scientists, biophysicists and engineers of technology like inkjet printers.
These latest investigations have clinched a long-standing controversy amongst the physical Chemistry community; the air-water interface is negatively charged by the adsorption of hydroxide ions.
Prof Angus Gray-Weale from the Chemistry, Department of Chemistry ...
Ottawa researchers find new pathway connected to type 2 diabetes
2014-03-19
Ottawa, ON, March 19, 2014 — Scientists at the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) Research Institute have discovered a cellular pathway that is responsible for keeping blood sugar levels low in obese or pre-diabetic people, and may prevent the onset of Type 2 diabetes. The discovery published this month in a leading journal Nature Cell Biology.
Following a meal, beta cells found in islets of the pancreas secrete insulin that helps to store food energy for future use. The inability of islet beta cells to produce enough insulin leads to diabetes. Unlike other ...
Postoperative cognitive dysfunction
2014-03-19
Older persons, in particular, tend to suffer from memory lapses and other types of cognitive impairment after undergoing surgical procedures (postoperative cognitive dysfunction, POCD). Surgery has been performed on older patients much more commonly in recent years than ever before, and their pre- and postoperative care has become an important matter. Ingrid Rundshagen, an anesthesiologist, has surveyed the available literature to find out what kinds of patients are more likely to have cognitive impairment after surgery, and how the clinical manifestations should best be ...
Diversity in UK gardens aiding fight to save threatened bumblebees, study suggests
2014-03-19
The global diversity of plants being cultivated by Britain's gardeners is playing a key role in the fight to save the nation's threatened bumblebees, new research has revealed.
Ecologists at Plymouth University, in a study published this week, have shown the most common species of bumblebee are not fussy about a plant's origin when searching for nectar and pollen among the nation's urban gardens.
But other species – and, in particular, long-tongued bees – do concentrate their feeding upon plants from the UK and Europe, for which they have developed a preference evolved ...
EU could afford to lead international climate action
2014-03-19
Major emitting countries may have to join the EU's effort much earlier to avoid a temporary overshoot of the 2 degree target, but even if they joined only in 2030, the overshoot would be limited to roughly 0.2 to 0.4 degrees Celsius. The initial unilateral leadership could be achieved at little extra costs for the EU. Late-comers would have the benefit of lower costs while they delay action but would face higher transient costs once their turn to decarbonize comes.
"The crisis-stricken EU is asking itself whether it can still afford climate leadership" says lead-author ...
Rush to prescribe: Study questions speed in giving antidepressants to grieving parents
2014-03-19
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Some doctors are too quick to prescribe antidepressants to parents who have suffered the death of a child either during pregnancy or within the first month of life, according to a study conducted by Florida State University researcher Jeffrey R. Lacasse.
In a study of 235 bereaved parents participating in an online support community, Lacasse found that 88 — or 37.4 percent — of them were prescribed a psychiatric medication to help them cope. Some women received prescriptions with a week of losing their children.
"This is simply too soon after the ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Researchers catalog the microbiome of US rivers
Mapping 1.6 million gut cells to find new ways treat disease
First molecule identified that promotes gut healing while inhibiting tumour progression
Trends in postpartum depression by race, ethnicity, and prepregnancy BMI
Short-term and long-term mortality risk after preterm birth
Thanksgiving special: dinosaur drumsticks and the story of the turkey trot
Superior photosynthesis abilities of some plants could hold key to climate-resilient crops
Human immune system is ‘ready to go’ long before birth
R sounds are rough, and L sounds are smooth, according to cross-cultural study
Healthy women have cells that resemble breast cancer, study finds
Cancer-like mutations in healthy cells point to origins of breast cancer
Preterm birth associated with increased mortality risk into adulthood, study finds
Genome Research publishes a Special Issue on Long-read DNA and RNA Sequencing Applications in Biology and Medicine
Dementia risk prediction: Zero-minute assessment at less than a dollar cost
Children’s Hospital Colorado Heart Institute earns national recognition for excellence in cardiomyopathy care
Trial shows alcohol-mimicking medication can give laryngeal dystonia patients back their voice
Cigarette smoke alters microbiota, aggravates flu severity
Landmark study reveals over 100,000 American youth living with inflammatory bowel disease
Diverse diets of civets in Borneo rainforest allow them to live in same geographical area
Virtual reality could be gamechanger in police-civilian crisis encounters
Recycled pacemakers function as well as new devices, international study suggests
Researchers eliminate the gritty mouth feel: How to make it easier to eat fiber-rich foods
An innovative antibiotic for drug-resistant bacteria
Garden produce grown near Fayetteville works fluorochemical plant contains GenX, other PFAs
CMU-Africa expands digital public infrastructure initiative across the continent
Study calls for city fashion waste shakeup
Scientists develop breakthrough culture system to unlock secrets of skin microbiome
Masseter muscle volume might be a key indicator of sarcopenia risk in older adults
New study unveils key strategies against drug-resistant prostate cancer
Northwestern Medicine, West Health, Meadows Mental Health Policy Institute collaboration to provide easier access to mental health care
[Press-News.org] Understanding binge eating and obesityA key challenge in evaluating anti-obesity treatment is determining how to objectively measure a person's desire to eat; with concerns about obesity on the rise, a research team from the University of Cambridge shares a possible solution