Researchers from the University of Sydney used lab rats to conduct a series of experiments replete with oreos, pringles, jelly snakes and chow.
They showed that environments where tasty high-fat and high-sugar treats were routinely consumed induced habitual control: animals lost the ability to make volitional nutritional choices based on the current value of food.
However, the study also showed that rats could easily be brought out of this state.
The researchers suggest using simple interventions, such as reminders of how unhealthy certain foods are or interrupting the automatic processing of junk-food cues.
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A first experiment backed this idea up by looking at volitional versus habitual control in rats.
Animals were first given repeated exposures to junk food or bland chow environments. After being food-deprived, they were trained to press levers that provided either sugar water or pellets.
Then, once they were full, they were once again placed in junk food and bland chow environments in order to see whether these distinct contexts would affect their food-seeking behaviour.
In a second experiment, the rats underwent the same procedures as in the first experiment.
However, this time distinct sound cues were played when rats were placed in junk food or bland chow contexts, creating specific environmental cues associated with the food types.
The researchers found that the cue played in the bland chow context improved sensitivity to the devaluation of food, when rats were subsequently placed in the junk food context after having been fed.
The study was published in the journal Frontiers in Behavioural Neuroscience.
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