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    Study Reveals Easier Way to Say No to Junk Food

    Thinking about your health before picking a food may make you more likely to make a healthy choice even if you don't think it's tasty, a new study shows.

    Researchers from the California Institute of Technology conducted a brain-imaging experiment with 33 adult participants  who had fasted for at least three hours. While lying in a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machine, each participant was shown images of 180 different food items, varying from chips and candy bars to apples and broccoli.

    The participants, none of whom were following a specific diet or trying to lose weight, were given three seconds to respond to each image with a decision about whether or not they'd want to eat the food after the experiment was over.

    Participants were able to respond "strong no," "no," "yes," or "strong yes" after they saw each food. After they viewed all of the images, a single image was chosen at random. If the volunteer had said "yes" or "strong yes" to the idea of eating that food, he or she was served it. [6 Easy Ways to Eat More Fruits and Vegetables]

    To test whether food choices can be influenced by shifting attention toward health, the researchers gave participants one of three instructions: "Consider the healthiness," "Consider the tastiness" or "Make decisions naturally." After the fMRI testing, the subjects were asked to rate the tastiness and healthiness of the foods.

    The researchers found that when the participants were instructed to think about healthiness, they were less likely to eat unhealthy food, even if they considered it tasty. They were also more likely to eat healthy food, including what they had rated as untasty.

    The researchers already knew that everyone uses the same area of the brain, the ventral medial prefrontal cortex, when deciding what to eat, but the new scans revealed that a second brain area, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, comes to life when a person is using self-control during the decision-making process.

    The researchers also found that being asked to think about healthiness led subjects to say no to foods more often than they did when asked to make decisions naturally.

    The findings were published in the July 27 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience.

    This story was provided by MyHealthNewsDaily, sister site to LiveScience.Follow MyHealthNewsDaily on Twitter @MyHealth_MHND.

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    78 comments

    • Eselle  •  9 months ago
      My favourite part of these articles is to read the hilarious comments from you folks.. Priceless.
      • BenitoElDio 9 months ago
        i totaly agree with you ESELLE
      • Morgan 9 months ago
        LOL best comment
      • Omar 9 months ago
        lol yep
    • Esme  •  9 months ago
      HOLY SHIT!!! This is incredible!! People are more likely to choose healthier foods when considering the healthiness of the options?!? This turns my whole world upside down!
      • Terry G 9 months ago
        Didn't this place a wake call for you? I know I'm flabbergasted....
      • Eselle 9 months ago
        L O L
    • murdermyster...  •  9 months ago
      I hope my tax dollars didn't pay for this study.
      How about doing a study on people who have a lack of control in doing stupid studies.
      Or a study on why people such as myself continue to read yahoo articles thinking they'll learn something new but knowing they won't even before they click.
    • Just A. Football Fan  •  9 months ago
      So let me get this right... the new easier to way to say no to junk food is to think about whether it's healthy? And this differs from the old way of saying no to junk food how?

      "Thinking about your health before picking a food may make you more likely to make a healthy choice..."

      No duh...

      Also on a related note thinking about how long you'll serve in jail keeps people from robbing banks!
      • kamustahappy 9 months ago
        Ummm most people actually don't know how long they'll serve otherwise they would do it... My aquaintance robbed a bank and got 6 months...
      • diamond 9 months ago
        Then I would have to say NOT ENOUGH PEOPLE ARE THINKING on either of your topics...........Proof of this: 1) All the fast food restaurants and the abundance of junk food being produced to serve and supply the non thinking people who by it!! Think about it, supply and demand, if people didn't want it and didn't eat it or buy it, they couldn't sell it and would stop making it! 2) Over crowded jails (I'm assuming you were speaking of criminals and other crimes and just generalized it by your comment on bank robbers), extremely lenient sentances because of overcrowding!
      • gerry 9 months ago
        @Diamond; very good response
    • Mr. Clone  •  9 months ago
      Wait, wait... So you're telling me that I should think about my health before I eat something? THAT'S GENIUS! Remarkable, I love how money is put to good use in these studies!
    • Jimmy  •  9 months ago
      blah blah blah, eat what you want in moderation.
    • Violet  •  9 months ago
      I can't watch a movie with carrots and peppers.
      • A Yahoo! User 9 months ago
        popcorn is not as bad as you think (just use the kind with low butter, just to satisfy the craving)...or choose baked tortilla chips with medium salsa...it'll fill you up and you won't be craving the junk.
    • wendimac  •  9 months ago
      Another pointless article....
    • Burning for you  •  9 months ago
      I didn't read past the first sentence. Common sense people.
    • zoey z  •  9 months ago
      These studies are a bunch of crapola unless they prove something 100%
    • Maiingan  •  9 months ago
      OOOooh...so you just say No! Dammit (facepalm), why didn't **I** think of that (note dripping sarcasm)
    • Nick  •  9 months ago
      "It's the latest diet craze! It's called 'Eat less, and move more!'"

      -SNL
    • M  •  9 months ago
      Researchers Stop wasting time and Money on stupid research!!! You are wasting our tax Payers money to conduct this YES , NO FOOD CRAVING.. moron
    • Julie  •  9 months ago
      Seriously? A 6 month waiting list for people that need MRIs for medical reasons and this is what the use them for....totally disgusted.
    • Kagees  •  9 months ago
      I propose a study that would end all studies.
    • Hezron  •  9 months ago
      Doing scientific research to state the obvious. Nice work if you can get it.
    • Mike  •  9 months ago
      Implement a "junk food tax" and people will definitely cut back. Subsidize healthier foods so people will go for that instead. This idea has already been proposed by some politicians, I think it's a good one.
    • kamustahappy  •  9 months ago
      Yawn.... Stupid scientists... Do the exact "study" this time give people $100 to feed their family for the month.. Chicken at $10 a lb won't last all month a jr chicken will cost you $1.50 and you get plenty of them... People don't eat junk food because they "WANT" to, it's because it FAST and AFFORDABLE.. I bought 4 friggin slices of swiss cheese the other day and it was $5... That's 3 bacon cheeseburgers and a pop at mcdonalds...
    • Pert  •  9 months ago
      For people, they should be staying on their diet, so, junk food is like potato chips and french fries that cause them a problem to gain weight. Therefore, for them that they should eat the healthy food, which it's good for the people and it's good for all of us.
    • Tom C  •  9 months ago
      Thinking about your health before picking a food may make you more likely to make a healthy choice even if you don't think it's tasty, a new study shows.

      DUH! It's called psychology! Am I the only one who knew this "trick"? Wow...
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