PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Junk food game helps people eat less and lose weight

2021-06-01
(Press-News.org) Using a brain-training app helps people eat less junk food and lose weight, new research suggests. The Food Trainer (FoodT app) trains people to tap on images of healthy foods - but to stop when they see unhealthy snacks, creating an association between these foods and stopping. The new study, by the universities of Exeter and Helsinki, found that playing the game about once a day for a month led to an average one-point reduction of junk food consumption on an eight-point scale (the scale ranges from four or more items per day, to one or zero items per month). Overall, people who used the app more also reported larger changes in their food intake. About half of the study's 1,234 participants followed the recommendation and played the game at least 10 times. Across all participants, an average weight loss of half a kilogram (just over a pound) and a small increase in healthy food eaten was seen. "As an example, someone who ate each junk food two to four times a week reduced this to once a week after using the app regularly for a month," said Professor Natalia Lawrence, of the University of Exeter. "Overall, the findings are really encouraging. The app is free and it only takes about four minutes per day - so it's something people realistically can do - and our results suggest it is effective. "There's some evidence that the benefits were stronger for people who were more overweight. "We would expect to see this, because the app targets mechanisms that lead people to become overweight, such as the strong urges to approach and consume tempting junk foods." Dr Matthias Aulbach, of the University of Helsinki, added: "For anyone with unhealthy eating habits - perhaps developed during lockdown - FoodT might be helpful." The study used FoodT usage data, and the app also periodically asks questions about how often users eat certain foods, along with other information such as their age and weight. The findings suggest that using the app regularly was linked with bigger changes in eating habits. "If you're trying to teach the brain something new, it's a good idea to space out the learning over multiple sessions," said Dr Aulbach. "It may be helpful to do the training in different contexts - not just at home but at work and elsewhere, so the associations you learn don't just relate to one location. "From our results it seems important that you do the training regularly and don't just stop. So keep it interesting and relevant for yourself so you won't get bored with it: personalise the app as far as possible and pick the foods that you find really hard to resist." The researchers stress that their findings should be interpreted cautiously, because there was no control (comparison) group and other factors (such as the possibility that people who did more training were also separately more motivated to lose weight) could play a part in the results. Leaving a review on Google Play, one app user wrote: "Really useful. Seems to work on different levels whether it's the green/red circle association of stop/go which psychologically makes you more aware, I'm not sure - but my cravings have reduced dramatically and I no longer eat in the evening mindlessly."

INFORMATION:

Development of the app was made possible by donations to a crowdfunding campaign, and app users who consent for their data to be used - anonymously - have enabled this research and app improvements to be made. For more information on the app, including videos on how to use it, visit http://www.exeter.ac.uk/foodt/ The study received funding from the Gyllenberg Foundation. The paper, published in the journal Appetite, is entitled: "App-based food Go/No-Go training: user engagement and dietary intake in an opportunistic observational study."



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Novel nano-encapsulation approach for efficient dopamine delivery in Parkinson's treatment

Novel nano-encapsulation approach for efficient dopamine delivery in Parkinsons treatment
2021-06-01
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a common neurodegenerative disorder caused by the death of dopaminergic neurons in a part of the brain (known as substantia nigra pars compacta), which leads to a deficit of dopamine (DA), one of the main neurotransmitters active in the central nervous system. Symptomatic treatment focuses on increasing the concentration of dopamine into the brain. However, dopamine is not directly administered, because it is unable to cross the so called blood-brain barrier, which prevents some of the substances circulating in the blood to penetrate into the nervous system. Thus, DA precursor levodopa (L-DOPA) -an amino-acid which participates ...

Deep impact of superficial skin inking: Acoustic analysis of underlying tissue

2021-06-01
Announcing a new article publication for BIO Integration journal. In this article the authors Craig S. Carlson and Michiel Postema, from University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa and Tampere University, Tampere, Finland discuss deep impact of superficial skin inking: acoustic analysis of underlying tissue. Skin tattoos are a common decoration, but profound scientific study on whether a skin tattoo alters the acoustic response from superficial tissues, and therefore from underlying tissue, was previously lacking; thus, any quantitative effects were unknown. This study is the first to investigate the nature of artifacts in ultrasound images, which have been observed to originate from tattooed skin. The work was conducted theoretically and experimentally using ...

It's never too early to begin healthy eating habits

2021-06-01
June 1, 2021 -- Researchers at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health and Universidade Federal de Ciências da Saúde de Porto Alegre, Brazil found that when health workers were trained to promote infant healthy feeding practices to pregnant women their children consumed less fats and carbohydrates at 3 years of age and had lower measures of body fat at the age of 6. The study is the first to show that the roots for obesity start in the first year of life, after mothers stop breastfeeding. The findings are published online in the Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics. "The first year after ...

Bar-Ilan University researchers increase life expectancy in mice by an average of 30%

Bar-Ilan University researchers increase life expectancy  in mice by an average of 30%
2021-06-01
Aging is associated with an overall decline in health and increased frailty, and is a major risk factor for multiple chronic diseases. Frailty syndrome, characterized by weakness, fatigue and low physical activity, affects more than 30% of the elderly population. Increasing our understanding of the mechanisms underlying the aging process is a top priority to facilitate the development of interventions that will lead to the preservation of health and improvements on survival and lifespan. Cumulative evidence suggests that diet and metabolism are key targetable regulators of healthy lifespan. Prof. Haim Cohen, Director of the Sagol Healthy Human Longevity Center at Bar-Ilan University, ...

Men make more extreme choices and decisions, find scientists

2021-06-01
This is the main finding of new research involving more than 50,000 participants in 97 samples, published in the prestigious journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS). The findings show that the more extreme choices and decisions of men can be both positive and negative. "The question of whether men and women make systematically different choices and decisions is one on the most fundamental (and controversial) questions in psychological research," Associate Professor Stefan Volk from the University of Sydney Business School said. "We found men were much more likely than women to be at the extreme ends of the behavioural spectrum, either acting very ...

Tuberculosis in Irish prisons: New study recommends increased testing

2021-06-01
Investigators from Trinity College Dublin, the Irish Mycobacteria Reference Laboratory, St James's Hospital, and the Department of Public Health HSE East believe tuberculosis (TB) care in Irish Prisons should be supported, considering the findings of their study which is published today (Tuesday, 1st June, 2021) in the International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease. The study describes an investigation into a large outbreak of tuberculosis which occurred in an Irish prison in 2011. This resulted in 34 people contracting active TB from a single infectious case. The use of Whole Genome Sequencing enabled ...

Precise data for improved coastline protection

2021-06-01
Researchers working under the leadership of the Technical University of Munich (TUM) have conducted the first precise and comprehensive measurements of sea level rises in the Baltic Sea and the North Sea. A new method now makes it possible to determine sea level changes with millimeter accuracy even in coastal areas and in case of sea ice coverage. This is of vital importance for planning protective measures. For the billions of people who live in coastal areas, rising sea levels driven by climate change can pose an existential threat. "To protect people and infrastructure - for example by building flood protection structures, securing ports or making ...

Researchers discover how cells can survive in high salt concentrations

Researchers discover how cells can survive in high salt concentrations
2021-06-01
Cells have to constantly adapt to their surroundings in order to survive. A sudden increase in the environmental levels of an osmolyte, such as salt, causes cells to lose water and shrink. In a matter of seconds, they activate a mechanism that allows them to recover their initial water volume and avoid dying. Finding out which genes are involved in surviving osmotic stress was the subject of a study led by the laboratories of Dr. Posas and Dr. de Nadal at the Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona) and Dr. Valverde at Pompeu Fabra University (UPF), in collaboration with a group led by Dr. Moffat from the University of Toronto (Canada). wide-genome genetic screening, the scientists discovered the central role of a gene known as LRRC8A in cellular ...

A new direction of topological research is ready for take off

A new direction of topological research is ready for take off
2021-06-01
In a joint effort, ct.qmat scientists from Dresden, Rostock, and Würzburg have accomplished non-Hermitian topological states of matter in topolectric circuits. The latter acronym refers to topological and electrical, giving a name to the realization of synthetic topological matter in electric circuit networks. The main motif of topological matter is its role in hosting particularly stable and robust features immune to local perturbations, which might be a pivotal ingredient for future quantum technologies. The current ct.qmat results promise a knowledge transfer from electric circuits to alternative optical platforms, and have just been published in Physical Review Letters. Topological defect tuning in non-Hermitian systems At the center of the currently reported work is the ...

Scientists demonstrate a better, more eco-friendly method to produce hydrogen peroxide

Scientists demonstrate a better, more eco-friendly method to produce hydrogen peroxide
2021-06-01
Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is used to disinfect minor cuts at home and for oxidative reactions in industrial manufacturing. Now, the pandemic has further fueled demand for this chemical and its antiseptic properties. While affordable at the grocery store, H2O2 is actually difficult and expensive to manufacture at scale. A team led by the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign has demonstrated a more efficient and environmentally friendly method to produce H2O2, according to a recent study published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. "While the two ingredients--hydrogen and oxygen--are either inexpensive or freely available from the atmosphere, hydrogen peroxide is highly reactive and unstable, which makes it very hard to produce," said first author Tomas ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Archaeologists use AI to create prehistoric video game

Mitochondria migrate toward the cell membrane in response to high glucose levels

Tiny viral switch offers hope against drug-resistant bacteria

Most parents aware of early peanut introduction guidelines, but confused about details

HPV vaccine can protect against severe lesions of the vulva and vagina

Virtual care provision and emergency department use among children and youth

Quadrivalent HPV vaccine and high-grade vulvovaginal lesions

Insights into dry eyes gained from stem cell-derived tear glands 

Researchers identify 166 human pluripotent stem cell lines available for use in clinical applications

Europa Clipper instrument uniquely observed interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS

UN University Report challenges climate change as sole trigger of Syrian Civil War, exposing governance failures in drought response

Real estate investment trust (REIT) acquisition associated with hospital closure and bankruptcy

New Raman imaging system detects subtle tumor signals

Boston Children’s receives a $7.5 million grant from Aligning Research to Impact Autism (ARIA) to provide clinical research coordination for the IMPACT Network

Spray-on antibacterial coating offers new protection for plants against disease and drought

ESMT Berlin study: What makes a first offer successful in negotiations

Groundbreaking ceremony marks the beginning of CTAO-South Array construction in Chile

Why swearing makes you stronger

What prevents more cancer patients from enrolling in potentially life-saving clinical trials?

UK’s worst-case climate risks laid bare for lawmakers

A decline in churchgoing linked to more deaths of despair

TAMEST announces Maralice Conacci-Sorrell, Ph.D., UT Southwestern Medical Center, as 2026 Mary Beth Maddox Award & Lectureship Recipient

Global study to evaluate whether dengue outbreaks can be anticipated earlier

Chonnam National University researchers propose innovative voltage-loop control for power factor correction

Accelerating next-generation drug discovery with click-based construction of PROTACs

Detecting the hidden magnetism of altermagnets

$7M gift supports health research, engineering and athletics at UT San Antonio

NU-9 halts Alzheimer’s disease in animal model before symptoms begin

Hospitals acquired by real estate investment trusts associated with greater risk of bankruptcy, closure

City of Hope scientists study rare disorder to uncover mechanism and hormone regulation underlying fatty liver disease and sweet aversion

[Press-News.org] Junk food game helps people eat less and lose weight