Reward, dopamine and the control of food intake: implications for obesity

ND Volkow, GJ Wang, RD Baler - Trends in cognitive sciences, 2011 - cell.com
ND Volkow, GJ Wang, RD Baler
Trends in cognitive sciences, 2011cell.com
The ability to resist the urge to eat requires the proper functioning of neuronal circuits
involved in top-down control to oppose the conditioned responses that predict reward from
eating the food and the desire to eat the food. Imaging studies show that obese subjects
might have impairments in dopaminergic pathways that regulate neuronal systems
associated with reward sensitivity, conditioning and control. It is known that the
neuropeptides that regulate energy balance (homeostatic processes) through the …
The ability to resist the urge to eat requires the proper functioning of neuronal circuits involved in top-down control to oppose the conditioned responses that predict reward from eating the food and the desire to eat the food. Imaging studies show that obese subjects might have impairments in dopaminergic pathways that regulate neuronal systems associated with reward sensitivity, conditioning and control. It is known that the neuropeptides that regulate energy balance (homeostatic processes) through the hypothalamus also modulate the activity of dopamine cells and their projections into regions involved in the rewarding processes underlying food intake. It is postulated that this could also be a mechanism by which overeating and the resultant resistance to homoeostatic signals impairs the function of circuits involved in reward sensitivity, conditioning and cognitive control.
cell.com