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Hunger The Physiology of Hunger The Psychology of Hunger Obesity and Weight Control

Hunger The Physiology of Hunger The Psychology of Hunger Obesity and Weight Control. Hunger. When do we eat?. When are we hungry?. How do we know when our stomach is empty?. Our stomach _________. These are also called hunger pangs. The Physiology of Hunger.

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Hunger The Physiology of Hunger The Psychology of Hunger Obesity and Weight Control

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  1. Hunger • The Physiology of Hunger • The Psychology of Hunger • Obesity and Weight Control

  2. Hunger When do we eat? When are we hungry? How do we know when our stomach is empty? Our stomach _________. These are also called hunger pangs.

  3. The Physiology of Hunger Stomach contractions (pangs) send signals to the brain making us aware of our hunger.

  4. Stomachs Removed Tsang (1938) removed rat stomachs, connected the esophagus to the small intestines, and the rats still felt hungry (and ate food). What does this say about the previous study?

  5. Body Chemistry & the Brain • Levels of glucose in the blood are monitored by receptors (neurons) in the stomach, liver, and intestines. • They send signals to the hypothalamus in the brain. Rat Hypothalamus

  6. Hypothalamic Centers • The lateral hypothalamus (LH) brings on hunger (stimulation). • Destroy the LH, and the animal has no interest in eating. • The reduction of blood glucose stimulates orexin in the LH, which leads rats to eat ravenously.

  7. Hypothalamic Centers • The ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) depresses hunger (stimulation). • Destroy the VMH, and the animal eats excessively. Richard Howard

  8. Hypothalamus & Hormones The hypothalamus monitors a number of hormones that are related to hunger.

  9. Set Point • Set Point: the point at which an individual's “weight thermostat” is supposedly set • Manipulating the lateral and the ventromedial hypothalamus alters the body’s “weight thermostat.” • Heredity influences set point and body type. • If weight is lost, food intake increases and energy expenditure decreases. • If weight is gained, the opposite takes place.

  10. The Psychology of Hunger • Memory plays an important role in hunger. • Due to difficulties with retention, amnesia patients eat frequently if given food (Rozin et al., 1998).

  11. Taste Preference: Biology or Culture? • Body chemistry and environmental factors influence not only whenwe feel hunger but whatwe feel hungry for! Richard Olsenius/ Black Star Victor Englebert

  12. Hot Cultures like Hot Spices • Countries with hot climates use more bacteria-inhibiting spices in meat dishes.

  13. Ecology of Eating • Situationsalso control our eating • People tend to eat more with others? T/F • Unit Bias: portion size effects body type/weight of cultures • Possible explanation why French have smaller waistlines • Portion experiments

  14. Eating Disorders • Anorexia Nervosa:A condition in which a normal-weight person (usually an adolescent woman) continuously loses weight but still feels overweight. Reprinted by permission of The New England Journal of Medicine, 207, (Oct 5, 1932), 613-617. Lisa O’Connor/ Zuma/ Corbis

  15. Eating Disorders • Bulimia Nervosa:A disorder characterized by episodes of overeating, usually high-calorie foods, followed by vomiting, using laxatives, fasting, or excessive exercise.

  16. Reasons for Eating Disorders • Family: Younger generations develop eating disorders when raised in families in which weight is an excessive concern. • Low Self-Esteem: low self-evaluations, perfectionist standards, fret about falling short of expectations, immensely concerned how others perceive them • Culture: body ideals vary across culture and time • Genetics: Twin studies show that eating disorders are more likely to occur in identical twins rather than fraternal twins.

  17. Obesity and Weight Control • Fat is an ideal form of stored energy and is readily available. • In times of famine, an overweight body was a sign of affluence.

  18. Obesity • Obesity: A disorder characterized by being excessively overweight. • Obesity increases the risk for health issues like cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, hypertension, arthritis, and back problems. http://www.cyberdiet.com

  19. Body Mass Index (BMI) • Obesity in children increases their risk of diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, gallstones, arthritis, and certain types of cancer, thus shortening their life-expectancy.

  20. Obesity and Mortality The death rate is high among very overweight men.

  21. When women applicants were made to look overweight, subjects were less willing to hire them. Social Effects of Obesity

  22. Physiology of Obesity • Fat Cells: There are 30-40 billion fat cells in the body. • These cells can increase in size (2-3 times their normal size) and number (75 billion) in an obese individual

  23. The Genetic Factor • Identical twin studies reveal that body weight has a genetic basis. • The obese mouse on the left has a defective gene for the hormone leptin. • The mouse on the right sheds 40% of its weight when injected with leptin.

  24. Glucose Glucose = the form of sugar that circulates in the blood and provides the major source of energy for body tissues. It is the most important fuel of the brain Insulin = a hormone that enables glucose to enter the cells and provide energy. After eating insulin levels rise allowing the glucose into the cells of the body This produces a feeling of satiety If glucose levels fall then you become hungry again c. Glucagon has the opposite effect it causes the liver to convert stored nutrients into glucose = hunger

  25. Leptins– The hypothalamus measures levels of this protein produced by bloated fat cells. When leptin levels rise the brain via the PARAVENTRICULAR HYPOTHALAMUS (PVN) sends messages to inhibit the production of NPY which inhibits eating

  26. Activity • Lack of exercise is a major contributor to obesity. • Just watching TV for two hours resulted in a 23% increase of weight when other factors were controlled (Hu & others, 2003).

  27. Food Consumption • Over the past 40 years, average weight gain has increased. • Health professionals are pleading with US citizens to limit their food intake.

  28. Losing Weight • In the US, two-thirds of the women and half of the men say they want to lose weight. • The majority of them lose money on diet programs.

  29. Plan to Lose Weight • When you are motivated to lose weight, begin a weight-loss program, minimize your exposure to tempting foods, exercise, and forgive yourself for lapses. Joe R. Liuzzo

  30. Summary

  31. Fig. 10-3, p. 379

  32. p. 378

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