A network of interconnected brain regions, including orbitofrontal, ventral striatal, amygdala, and midbrain areas, has been widely implicated in a number of aspects of food reward. However, in humans, sensitivity to reward can vary significantly from one person to the next. Individuals high in this trait experience more frequent and intense food cravings and are more likely to be overweight or develop eating disorders associated with excessive food intake. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we report that individual variation in trait reward sensitivity (as measured by the Behavioral Activation Scale) is highly correlated with activation to images of appetizing foods (e.g., chocolate cake, pizza) in a fronto–striatal–amygdala–midbrain network. Our findings demonstrate that there is considerable personality-linked variability in the neural response to food cues in healthy participants and provide important insight into the neurobiological factors underlying vulnerability to certain eating problems (e.g., hyperphagic obesity).
Individual Differences in Reward Drive Predict Neural Responses to Images of Food
J. Beaver,A. Lawrence,Jenneke van Ditzhuijzen,Matt H. Davis,Andrew N. Woods,A. Calder
Published 2006 in Journal of Neuroscience
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2006
- Venue
Journal of Neuroscience
- Publication date
2006-05-10
- Fields of study
Medicine, Psychology
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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