Frontal attentional responses to food size are abnormal in obese subjects: An electroencephalographic study |
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Authors: | Claudio Babiloni Claudio Del Percio Anna Valenzano Nicola Marzano Mario De Rosas Annamaria Petito Antonello Bellomo Giuseppe Rossi Brunello Lecce Ciro Mundi Roberta Lizio Fabrizio Eusebi Giuseppe Cibelli |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, University of Tuebingen, Schleichstraße 4, 72070 Tübingen, Germany;2. Department of Psychology, University of Freiburg, Engelbergerstraße 41, 79085 Freiburg;3. Clinic of Tumorbiology, Breisacherstraße 17, 79106 Freiburg;4. Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital of Bellvitge, Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL), Barcelona, Spain;1. Division of Exercise Science and Sports Medicine, Department of Human Biology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Newlands, 7725, South Africa;2. Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Observatory, 7925, South Africa;3. Bioelectronics & Neuroscience group, The MARCS Institute, University of Western Sydney, Penrith, NSW 2751, Australia |
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Abstract: | ObjectiveAre obese subjects characterized by a reduction of attentional cortical responses to the enlargement of food or body images?MethodsElectroencephalographic data were recorded in 19 obese and 15 normal-weight adults during an “oddball” paradigm. The subjects were given frequent (70%) and rare (30%) stimuli depicting faces (FACE), food (FOOD), and landscapes (CONTROL), and clicked the mouse after the rare stimuli. These stimuli depicted the same frequent stimuli graphically dilated by 25% along the horizontal axis. Bioelectrical impedance indexed subjects’ body fat percentage. Cortical attentional responses were probed by the difference between positive event-related potentials peaking around 400–500 ms post-stimulus for the rare minus frequent stimuli (P300). Low resolution electromagnetic source tomography (LORETA) estimated P300 sources.ResultsIn the FOOD condition, the amplitude of medial prefrontal P300 sources (Brodmann area 9) was lower in the obese than normal-weight subjects, and there was a negative correlation between the body fat percentage and the amplitude of these sources in all subjects as a single group.ConclusionsThese results disclose that prefrontal attentional processes to food size are abnormal in obese subjects.SignificanceThe present study motivates future research evaluating the effects of cognitive rehabilitation in obese subjects. |
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Keywords: | Electroencephalography (EEG) Low resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA) P300 Normal-weight subjects Obese subjects |
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