A neural signature of food semantics is associated with body-mass index

•Normal-weight people judged functional sentences as incongruent with natural food.•In contrast, sensory sentences were deemed incongruent with transformed food.•N400-like ERPs showed a double dissociation that was paralleled by behavioral performance.•N400-like ERPs varied for natural food in under...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBiological psychology Vol. 129; pp. 282 - 292
Main Authors Pergola, Giulio, Foroni, Francesco, Mengotti, Paola, Argiris, Georgette, Rumiati, Raffaella Ida
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.10.2017
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Summary:•Normal-weight people judged functional sentences as incongruent with natural food.•In contrast, sensory sentences were deemed incongruent with transformed food.•N400-like ERPs showed a double dissociation that was paralleled by behavioral performance.•N400-like ERPs varied for natural food in underweight and for transformed food in obese women.•Food semantic representation contrasts sensory against functional properties and co-varies with BMI. Visual recognition of objects may rely on different features depending on the category to which they belong. Recognizing natural objects, such as fruits and plants, weighs more on their perceptual attributes, whereas recognizing man-made objects, such as tools or vehicles, weighs more upon the functions and actions they enable. Edible objects are perceptually rich but also prepared for specific functions, therefore it is unclear how perceptual and functional attributes affect their recognition. Two event-related potentials experiments investigated: (i) whether food categorization in the brain is differentially modulated by sensory and functional attributes, depending on whether the food is natural or transformed; (ii) whether these processes are modulated by participants’ body mass index. In experiment 1, healthy normal-weight participants were presented with a sentence (prime) and a photograph of a food. Primes described either a sensory feature (‘It tastes sweet’) or a functional feature (‘It is suitable for a wedding party’) of the food, while photographs depicted either a natural (e.g., cherry) or a transformed food (e.g., pizza). Prime-feature pairs were either congruent or incongruent. This design aimed at modulating N400-like components elicited by semantic processing. In experiment 1, N400-like amplitude was significantly larger for transformed food than for natural food with sensory primes, and vice versa with functional primes. In experiment 2, underweight and obese women performed the same semantic task. We found that, while the N400-like component in obese participants was modulated by sensory-functional primes only for transformed food, the same modulation was found in underweight participants only for natural food. These findings suggest that the level of food transformation interacts with participants’ body mass index in modulating food perception and the underlying brain processing.
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ISSN:0301-0511
1873-6246
DOI:10.1016/j.biopsycho.2017.09.001