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Scientists Explain Why We Still Crave Food After Feeling Full - Video
Overview
The global obesity epidemic has become a major public health concern, prompting researchers to investigate the behavioral and biological factors that contribute to overeating. One important factor is eating in the absence of hunger. This behavior may reflect a breakdown in normal appetite regulation, particularly in environments where people are constantly exposed to food-related.
A recent study published in the journal Appetite examined how learned responses to these food cues may encourage people to eat even when they are not hungry.
Normally, food cues activate reward-related responses in the brain that motivate eating. However, once a person becomes full, the motivational value of food typically decreases, and the desire to eat declines. When this reduction does not occur, researchers describe it as devaluation insensitivity, meaning the brain continues to treat food as rewarding despite satiety.
Eating behavior is influenced by many factors, including hunger, energy needs, the taste and appeal of food, past eating experiences, cultural habits, and the effort required to obtain food. Physiological signals also play a role.
The hormone ghrelin increases when blood sugar levels fall, stimulating hunger and encouraging food intake. In contrast, hormones such as leptin signal satiety and normally reduce the brain’s response to food-related stimuli.
To investigate how food cues influence behavior, researchers conducted an experiment using electroencephalography (EEG) to measure brain activity in response to food images. The study involved 90 university students who completed a learning task where images of certain foods were linked to rewards. Midway through the experiment, participants were fed one of the foods until they felt full, effectively reducing its value.
Interestingly, while participants reported reduced desire for the food and chose it less often afterward, their brain signals still showed strong reward responses when they saw images of it. This suggests that learned neural responses to food cues may persist even after satiety, potentially encouraging habitual overeating in modern food-rich environments.
REFERENCE: Sambrook, T. D., Wills, A. J., Hardwick, B., et al. (2026). Devaluation insensitivity of event related potentials associated with food cues. Appetite. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2025.108390. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0195666325005434


