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==13: MAR 4==
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==13. MAR 4: Unit Three: Dietary Change==
  
===Assigned===
 
  
:*Hibbing, John R., Kevin Smith, and John R. Alford, ''Predisposed'', Chapter 4, "Drunk Flies and Salad Greens". 
+
===Assigned Work===
:*Robert Sapolsky, from ''Behave'', Chapter 14, "Feeling Someone's Pain, Understanding Soemone's Pain, Alleviating Someone's Pain." 521-535.
 
  
===Sapolsky, Behave, C 14, 521-535===
+
:*Kessler, The End of Overeating, Chs 1-3  (p. 3-17) (14)
 +
:*Shepard, Gordon, C21 and C27 "Flavor and Obesity" (184-192; 8)
  
:*starts with "exposure to an aversive state" -- we call it empathy, but what is that?
+
===In-Class===
::q1: When does empathy lead us to actually do something helpful?
 
::q2: When we do act, whose benefit is it for?
 
  
:*sympathy -- feeling sorry for someone's pain. 
+
:*Review of resources for SW2: Assessing Industrial Food Systems
:*empathy -- includes a cognitive step of understanding the cause of someone's pain and "taking perspective"
 
:*compassion -- S. suggests this involves empathy plus taking action.
 
  
:*basic account of empathy research:
+
===Shepard, C21===
::*we are 'overimitative' - chimp / kids study524
 
::*mouse studies -- alterations of sensitivity to pain on seeing pain; fear association seeing another mouse exp fear conditioning
 
::*lots of species engage in consolation, chimps show third party consolation behavior, no consolation behavior in monkeys -- prairie voles!
 
::*526: rats, amazing rats -- US/them behaviors, some flexibility
 
  
::*527: describes mechanism of empathy: early emo contagion in kids may not be linked to cognitive judgement as later, when Theory of Mind emerges
+
:C21: Flavor and Obesity
  
::*Some neurobiology: the ACC - anterior cingulate cortex - processes ineroceptive info, conflict monitoring, (presumably cog. dissonance). susceptible to placebo effectImportantly, ACC activates on social exclusion, anxiety, disgust, embarrassment, but also pleasure, mutual pleasure.
+
:*considers the case of french fries in relation to the flavor perception system.  Salt, fat, and sweetness (SFS).  Discusses the meat flavor from tallow, now artificially added. Adds in the rest of the typical fast food meal.   Chased with coffee and a cookieCoffee has over 600 volatile moleculesPoint: the fast food meal involves '''sensory overload'''.
::*ACC also involved in action circuits. Oxytocin, hormone related to bondingBlock it in voles and they don't consoleAwwww!
 
::*How does self-interested "alarm" system of the ACC get involved in empathy?  '''Sapolsky's hypothesis''' 530:  Feeling someone's pain can be more effective for learning than just knowing that they're in pain.  Empathy may also be a self-interested learning system, separately from helping action.
 
  
::*Cognitive side of things: How do we bring judgements about desert and character to bear on empathic responses?
+
:*Overeating:
:::*Cognition comes in with less physical pain, judgement abstractly represented pain (a sign), unfamiliar pain.   
+
::*sensory overload;
:::*socioeconomics of empathy 533: wealth predicts lower empathythe wealthy take more candy!
+
::*caloric density; reduced roughage. 
:::*especially hard, cognitively, to empathize with people we don't like, because their pain actually stimulates a dopamine response!
+
::*But also “Sensory-specific satiety” .  Single flavors diminish appetite while multiple flavors amplify it.  You can eat more food if it includes multiple flavors.  The complexity of industrial flavors increases our ability to overconsume them.  187
 +
::*long-term overstimulation of skin and membranes of the lips and mouth.  Interesting research shows obese test subjects have more activation of these areas even while not eating.  [this supports the idea of a learned behavior from food conditioning]
 +
::*Conditioned overeating: Other research by Dana Small.  You can induce extra eating in rats with conditioned stimuli (bell).  Humans have wide field of potential conditioning stimuli.
 +
::*Other research suggests that ineffective inhibitory circuits play a role in obesity. 
 +
::*Others speculate that the reward value of food for obese is too low.  The brain doesn’t register enough pleasure from a normal diet.   
 +
::*Kessler: combination of SFS culprit (note that in Kessler’s theory several of the above theories are included.)
  
===Hibbing, et. al. ''Predisposed'' Chapter 4===
+
===Kessler, The End of Overeating, Chs 1-7  (3-45; 42)===
  
:*Point about fruit flies: taste for glycerol has biological basis, manipulable, yet we'd say the fly "likes" beer. Variation in human preferences yet also biologically instantiatedFocus on this chapter: taste/pref diffs of conservatives/liberals, their basis, connection to politics. Later, cars, stocks,
+
[Kessler's basic argument:
 +
:*Explaining overweight and obesity:
 +
::*Highly palatable foods (high in SFS, little chewing, slurpable...) can overwhelm our homeostatic system, which would otherwise maintain consumption levels that sustain normal weight.
 +
::*This leads to overconsumption.   
 +
::*The Food industry understands this and uses food science to created and market highly palatable foods.
 +
::*C: This provides a good explanation for overweight and obesity in the US.]
  
:*Obama's arugula faux pas.  Hunch.com studies (note problems): supports stereotype. Neuropolitics.org: similar findings
+
:*Some comments about approaching "unhealthy eating patterns" (expand list), some [https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/health-statistics/overweight-obesity baseline data], and Kessler's basic theory.   
:*Hibbing et al research 93: expanded preference research to humour, fiction, art, prefs in poetry, living spaces,
 
:*Market research in politics: mentions RNC, but consider Ethics News! since this came outBIG issue here.
 
  
:*'''History of research''' on finding personality traits that predict politcs: Nazi research - Erich Jaensch J and S type personalities; background of trying to understand WW2 atrocities; hypothesis of authoritarian personality Theordor Adorno, note quote at p. 100. F-scale for Fascism.  Han Eysenck's work on "tenderminded/toughminded"; 1960's Glenn Wilson.  conservatism as resistance to change and adherence to tradition. 
+
C1
::*70's and 80s research on RWA - right wing authoritarianism.  measure of submission to authority. 
 
::*Hibbing et al assessment:  criticisms persist in effort to find an "authoritarian personality".  But claim, "there is a deep psychology underlying politics"
 
  
:*Personality research: Big Five model: openness to experience, conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness, and neuroticismTwo of these are relevant to political orientationconscientiousness connected to research on "cognitive closure"
+
:*obesity trend of the 1980sby late 80s 1/3 of pop bt. 20 and 74 overweight(2017: 42.4% obese (note: not just overweight).  J
  
:*105ff: review of Haidt's Moral Foundations Theory
+
:*Historic comparisons: 1960-2000, average weight of women in their 20s goes from 128 to 157.  Also other deciles.  Data also revealed that some people were gaining a lot more than the average.  In other words, the distribution was changing.  Overweight people became disproportionately overweight.  More outliers.
  
:*108ff: Values theory of Shalom Schwartz.  diagram at 109.  10 core values on axis of individual vs. collective welfare and group loyalty versus ind. pleasure.  Diagram also looks like an ideological spectrum.
+
C2
  
:*PTC polymorphism linked to conservatism.   
+
:*obesity is the result of eating too much food.  Confusing to separate metabolism, etc.  People underreport consumption. Studies to support claims.  P.8  [Note some criticisms here: microbiome effectsOthers argue that metabolic changes do occur to make significant weight reduction difficult.]
  
:*"Conservatives and liberals experience and process different worlds"
+
:*Homeostasis:  tendency of body systems to maintain bodily states within a particular range of variation.  Communication occurs throughout the body to this end.  But homeostasis can’t explain weight gain. Homeostasic system can be overwhelmed by the “reward system”.  Anticipations of reward motivate exertion. 
 +
 
 +
:*Some animal studies show direct stimulation of reward seeking behavior.  Stimulate the far-lateral hypothalamus” and animals overeat.  Even to cross electrified floor.  [Note basic explanation here.]
 +
 
 +
:*Can some kinds of food stimulate us to keep eating?
 +
 
 +
C3
 +
 
 +
:*Palatability - def.  a food with an agreeable taste, but in food science - a food that motivates more consumption. 
 +
 
 +
:*Palatable foods engage sugar, salt, and fat, but also sensory cues.  Research (13) on combined effects of sugar and fat (Drewnowski).  Underlies many palatable features of food.  Combinations of fat and sugar chosen over other mixes.  Can make food hyperpalatable.  [https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/11/191105104436.htm Example] of "hyper-palatability" in industry and as a research concept in food science.
 +
 
 +
:*15: Research (rat study) showing that consumption of SFS optimized foods increases further consumption.  Both obesity prone and obesity resistant rats over ate high SF foods. 
 +
 
 +
:*Sclafani research.  Neat fruit-loop lab detail.  Just chillin' with his rats.:  feeding rats a supermarket sample of palatable food makes them obese. 
 +
 
 +
:*Some palatability research not in the reading:
 +
::*[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5332909/ Can the Palatability of Healthy, Satiety-Promoting Foods Increase with Repeated Exposure during Weight Loss?]
 +
::*
 +
 
 +
C4
 +
 
 +
:*Food industry experts corroborate Kessler’s point about SFS foods and overeating.  It’s their strategy. 
 +
 
 +
:*”'''Layering'''” SFS: examples of foods that layer S F and S.  (Gordy's lemon chicken, much like p. 20 "Chicken Pot Stickers").  List: White Chocolate Mocha Frapp, Bloomin’ Onions, Salads with high SFS dressings (“fat with a little lettuce”). [Remember, restaurants don’t have to provide nutritional information.]
 +
 
 +
C5
 +
 
 +
:*Critical of “set point theory” more interested in version he calls “'''settling point'''” theory.  A kind of equilibrium between appetite (which both a drive to eat and capacity to be satisfied and expenditure - physical work and body that burns calories effectively.  Constant access to highly palatable foods drives up '''settling point'''.    (Kind of acknowledges that there is wide variation in the hold (capture) of high SFS foods. 
 +
 
 +
:*p. 25: Discussion with other people who find weight control challenging.  note descriptions.  Sight of favorite SFS foods causes salivation and tingling sensations.  Important qualification: Food cravings are not unique to overweight people. 
 +
 
 +
C6
 +
 
 +
:*More theory: '''Reinforcing foods'''
 +
::*Rewarding foods are reinforcing.  Reinforcing measured by willingness to work for substance and whether other stimuli can become associated with it.  (Shepard’s account helps show how this works.)
 +
:*SFS Foods can be an effective reward even in the absence of hunger.  Animal studies to show this.  Research: rats will press levers to get SFS foods.  A lot. P. 30.  Confirms the idea that combinations of fat and sugar increase willingness to work for reward. Approaches reward structure of cocaine.
 +
 
 +
:*“'''Conditioned place paradigm'''”. — tendency to prefer the location in which a reward was experienced.  Party food at sport viewing events, for example.  Rat study involving more and less preferred spaces.  High SFS foods can override location preference. 
 +
 
 +
:*Other influences:  portion, concentration of rewarding ingredients, variety. 
 +
 
 +
C7
 +
 
 +
:*Neural account of high SFS / palatable foods.  Neuron encodes when it fires more often from a stimuli.  Complex patterns can be encoded from food experience
 +
 
 +
:* Taste is predominant.  “'''Orosensory self-stimulation'''”.  Opioid circuitry stimulated by food.  P. 37: mechanisms of the reward system.  Imp of nucleus accumbens - a neural structure that governs reward. 
 +
 
 +
:*Claims there is a mutually reinforcing effect between highly palatable foods and opioid circuits. Explains how emotional eating can reduce the pain associated with stress and depression. 
 +
 
 +
:* Some evidence (Wooley p. 38) that highly palatable foods interfere with or override '''taste specific satiety''' tendency to get sated by a single taste. SFS combinations can override taste specific satiety.  Stimulation of the opioid circuits in animals overrode boredom with single taste.

Latest revision as of 18:31, 4 March 2024

13. MAR 4: Unit Three: Dietary Change

Assigned Work

  • Kessler, The End of Overeating, Chs 1-3 (p. 3-17) (14)
  • Shepard, Gordon, C21 and C27 "Flavor and Obesity" (184-192; 8)

In-Class

  • Review of resources for SW2: Assessing Industrial Food Systems

Shepard, C21

C21: Flavor and Obesity
  • considers the case of french fries in relation to the flavor perception system. Salt, fat, and sweetness (SFS). Discusses the meat flavor from tallow, now artificially added. Adds in the rest of the typical fast food meal. Chased with coffee and a cookie. Coffee has over 600 volatile molecules. Point: the fast food meal involves sensory overload.
  • Overeating:
  • sensory overload;
  • caloric density; reduced roughage.
  • But also “Sensory-specific satiety” . Single flavors diminish appetite while multiple flavors amplify it. You can eat more food if it includes multiple flavors. The complexity of industrial flavors increases our ability to overconsume them. 187
  • long-term overstimulation of skin and membranes of the lips and mouth. Interesting research shows obese test subjects have more activation of these areas even while not eating. [this supports the idea of a learned behavior from food conditioning]
  • Conditioned overeating: Other research by Dana Small. You can induce extra eating in rats with conditioned stimuli (bell). Humans have wide field of potential conditioning stimuli.
  • Other research suggests that ineffective inhibitory circuits play a role in obesity.
  • Others speculate that the reward value of food for obese is too low. The brain doesn’t register enough pleasure from a normal diet.
  • Kessler: combination of SFS culprit (note that in Kessler’s theory several of the above theories are included.)

Kessler, The End of Overeating, Chs 1-7 (3-45; 42)

[Kessler's basic argument:

  • Explaining overweight and obesity:
  • Highly palatable foods (high in SFS, little chewing, slurpable...) can overwhelm our homeostatic system, which would otherwise maintain consumption levels that sustain normal weight.
  • This leads to overconsumption.
  • The Food industry understands this and uses food science to created and market highly palatable foods.
  • C: This provides a good explanation for overweight and obesity in the US.]
  • Some comments about approaching "unhealthy eating patterns" (expand list), some baseline data, and Kessler's basic theory.

C1

  • obesity trend of the 1980s. by late 80s 1/3 of pop bt. 20 and 74 overweight. (2017: 42.4% obese (note: not just overweight). J
  • Historic comparisons: 1960-2000, average weight of women in their 20s goes from 128 to 157. Also other deciles. Data also revealed that some people were gaining a lot more than the average. In other words, the distribution was changing. Overweight people became disproportionately overweight. More outliers.

C2

  • obesity is the result of eating too much food. Confusing to separate metabolism, etc. People underreport consumption. Studies to support claims. P.8 [Note some criticisms here: microbiome effects. Others argue that metabolic changes do occur to make significant weight reduction difficult.]
  • Homeostasis: tendency of body systems to maintain bodily states within a particular range of variation. Communication occurs throughout the body to this end. But homeostasis can’t explain weight gain. Homeostasic system can be overwhelmed by the “reward system”. Anticipations of reward motivate exertion.
  • Some animal studies show direct stimulation of reward seeking behavior. Stimulate the far-lateral hypothalamus” and animals overeat. Even to cross electrified floor. [Note basic explanation here.]
  • Can some kinds of food stimulate us to keep eating?

C3

  • Palatability - def. a food with an agreeable taste, but in food science - a food that motivates more consumption.
  • Palatable foods engage sugar, salt, and fat, but also sensory cues. Research (13) on combined effects of sugar and fat (Drewnowski). Underlies many palatable features of food. Combinations of fat and sugar chosen over other mixes. Can make food hyperpalatable. Example of "hyper-palatability" in industry and as a research concept in food science.
  • 15: Research (rat study) showing that consumption of SFS optimized foods increases further consumption. Both obesity prone and obesity resistant rats over ate high SF foods.
  • Sclafani research. Neat fruit-loop lab detail. Just chillin' with his rats.: feeding rats a supermarket sample of palatable food makes them obese.
  • Some palatability research not in the reading:

C4

  • Food industry experts corroborate Kessler’s point about SFS foods and overeating. It’s their strategy.
  • Layering” SFS: examples of foods that layer S F and S. (Gordy's lemon chicken, much like p. 20 "Chicken Pot Stickers"). List: White Chocolate Mocha Frapp, Bloomin’ Onions, Salads with high SFS dressings (“fat with a little lettuce”). [Remember, restaurants don’t have to provide nutritional information.]

C5

  • Critical of “set point theory” more interested in version he calls “settling point” theory. A kind of equilibrium between appetite (which both a drive to eat and capacity to be satisfied and expenditure - physical work and body that burns calories effectively. Constant access to highly palatable foods drives up settling point. (Kind of acknowledges that there is wide variation in the hold (capture) of high SFS foods.
  • p. 25: Discussion with other people who find weight control challenging. note descriptions. Sight of favorite SFS foods causes salivation and tingling sensations. Important qualification: Food cravings are not unique to overweight people.

C6

  • More theory: Reinforcing foods
  • Rewarding foods are reinforcing. Reinforcing measured by willingness to work for substance and whether other stimuli can become associated with it. (Shepard’s account helps show how this works.)
  • SFS Foods can be an effective reward even in the absence of hunger. Animal studies to show this. Research: rats will press levers to get SFS foods. A lot. P. 30. Confirms the idea that combinations of fat and sugar increase willingness to work for reward. Approaches reward structure of cocaine.
  • Conditioned place paradigm”. — tendency to prefer the location in which a reward was experienced. Party food at sport viewing events, for example. Rat study involving more and less preferred spaces. High SFS foods can override location preference.
  • Other influences: portion, concentration of rewarding ingredients, variety.

C7

  • Neural account of high SFS / palatable foods. Neuron encodes when it fires more often from a stimuli. Complex patterns can be encoded from food experience.
  • Taste is predominant. “Orosensory self-stimulation”. Opioid circuitry stimulated by food. P. 37: mechanisms of the reward system. Imp of nucleus accumbens - a neural structure that governs reward.
  • Claims there is a mutually reinforcing effect between highly palatable foods and opioid circuits. Explains how emotional eating can reduce the pain associated with stress and depression.
  • Some evidence (Wooley p. 38) that highly palatable foods interfere with or override taste specific satiety tendency to get sated by a single taste. SFS combinations can override taste specific satiety. Stimulation of the opioid circuits in animals overrode boredom with single taste.