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appetisingness
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Appetisingness Access

The researchers introduce and explore several fascinating concepts regarding how we perceive food:

: Other research supporting these ideas found that viewing "good-looking" food increases blood flow to the left-frontal pole of the brain, a region associated with emotional and cognitive processing of feeding behavior. Pictures of food create feelings of hunger appetisingness

An interesting paper on this topic is , published in Brain and Cognition . It explores how the modern-day saturation of high-definition food images (often called "food porn") affects our physiological responses and long-term health. 🍽️ Key Insights from the Paper 🍽️ Key Insights from the Paper : The

: The paper discusses whether viewing images of food can eventually "satiate" us or if it simply keeps us in a constant state of craving. : The mere sight of "appetising" food images

: This refers to the natural evolutionary desire to look at food. Historically, this helped humans find energy-dense resources; today, it is triggered by digital screens.

: The mere sight of "appetising" food images can trigger a release of the hormone ghrelin , which increases hunger and prepares the body for metabolism—even if you aren't physically hungry.

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