Can't Shake the Shake Shakes
In a new study published by the Archives of General Psychiatry, researchers at Yale's Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to look at the brain activity of women presented with a picture of a chocolate milkshake. They found that higher scores on their Yale Food Addiction Scale—which asks subjects to agree or disagree with statements such as, "I find that when I start eating certain foods, I end up eating much more than I had planned"—"correlated with greater activation in the anterior cingulate cortex, medial orbitofrontal cortex, and amygdala"—brain regions associated with pleasure and craving—"in response to anticipated receipt of food." When the subjects with high scores drank the milkshake, by contrast, they "showed less activation in the lateral orbitofrontal cortex," a brain region associated with self-control. These patterns are similar to those seen in drug addicts. According to The Hartford Courant, this similarity "suggests that a chocolate milkshake and a line of cocaine might not be so different." The Globe and Mail likewise suggests that if you find yourself "craving a milkshake," "you might be a junk-food addict," while The Wall Street Journal worries that "food may be addicting to some," and WLS, the ABC affiliate in Chicago, reports that "for some people food does seem to act like a drug on the brain."
All addictions—defined as hard-to-break attachments to things that provide pleasure or relieve stress—share common features, and it is not surprising to find these similarities are reflected in brain activity, as is everything that humans think, feel, experience, or do. But the notion that you need fMRI images to show that people can be addicted to certain kinds of food is absurd. People can be addicted to just about anything. And as psychologists such as Stanton Peele and Jeffrey Schaler point out, addiction can be good, bad, or neutral. Although it is perfectly meaningful to say you are addicted to good books, trashy TV, sex, exercise, blog reading, or love (just ask Robert Palmer), that does not mean you should give up these attachments. An addiction can be life-enhancing or self-destructive, and its consequences depend to a great extent on how it is treated by the law. When the Journal's Kevin Helliker says food addicts, unlike drug addicts, do not steal to support their habits, he is not identifying an inherent difference between milkshakes and heroin; he is observing a side effect of a government policy that makes heroin much more expensive than it would otherwise be.
When it comes to illegal drugs, official propaganda teaches that the power of addiction arises from the quasi-magical properties of a particular substance. Anyone who has considered the research on patterns of drug use knows there is no such thing as an ineluctably addictive drug. But the public and the press tend to accept the government's claims about addiction to illegal drugs, at least with respect to such reputedly irresistible substances as crack, methamphetamine, and heroin. Hence the resistance to comparisons between milkshakes and cocaine. The stories about this study are careful to note the plain truth that food addiction occurs only in "some" people. Yet the same thing is undeniably true about drug addiction, as Reason contributor Maia Szalavitz perceptively notes in Time:
Is Häagen-Dazs ice cream as addictive as heroin? Or, put another way, is heroin as addictive as Häagen-Dazs?
Depending on how you phrase the question, you're either asking whether heroin addiction is no more serious than a love of junk food, or you're questioning whether junk food junkies may have a serious disorder that needs intervention….
Notably, the study also found that food addiction symptoms and brain responses to food were not associated with weight: there were some overweight women who showed no food addiction symptoms, and some normal-weight women who did.
That's why addictions aren't simple: they involve variations not only in levels of desire, but also in levels of ability to control that desire. And these factors may change in relation to social situations and stress.
Neither heroin nor Häagen-Dazs leads to addiction in the majority of users, and yet there are certain situations that may prompt binges in people who otherwise have high levels of self-control. So the answers to addiction may lie not in the substances themselves, but in the relationship people have with them and the settings in which they are consumed.
What are the policy implications of this debate? Former FDA Commissioner David Kessler blames obesity on "hyperpalatable" foods that manufacturers and restaurant chains deliberately design to taste good (those bastards!). Kelly Brownell, the psychology professor who heads the obesity research center that produced this study, focuses on the "food environment," which includes not just the food itself but its price, its convenience, and all the cues, such as advertising, that encourage people to consume it. Both critiques suggest that regulation is necessary to stop evil corporations from taking advantage of people's uncontrollable impulses. But if food addiction is resistible, if it affects only a minority and does not necessarily lead to unhealthy overreating, it is not a very powerful argument for restrictions that affect everyone.
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MY NAME IS...
let me guess
No, jackass, he was talking about ME.
The Mike Rula'
I am addicted to dihydrogen monoxide in its liquid and gas form. Is the FDA going to ban it?
If mixed with the gaseous form of propylene glycol, then yeah, probably.
You're addicted to steam?
That shit will peel your skin off. It should be banned!!!!
"Apparently, Carl, when you bought that medium drink, you entered a binding contract that enables them to rip off your dick."
"Close the dick gate!"
Rice Mascot: You don't think they're... dicking around over there, do ya?
Mr. Wong Burger: I doubt it. They're professional dick hunters. They crave dick...as we all do.
Now I'm craving some wasabi fries.
Cartman: Hey, Chad, eh...you know what you need? You need a friend.
Chad: I...I do?
Cartman: Yes. A chocolate friend. Mr. Candy Bar doesn't judge you, Chad. Mr. Candy Bar likes you just the way you are. Look at how yummy and sweet he is...there you go. That'll just be four dollars...there you go.
I'm imagining some 60 million years of evolution, where people-- especially women-- had a very strong drive to eat food (take in nourishment) and likely more than they needed at the one sitting. Because they had to store fat reserves for things like bearing children and nursing. Food (nutrition) storage in reservers would have been a very important thing when meals and food supply would have been highly irregular. Which would have been for 99% of human existence.
So the fact that the ladies see a slightly heightened response when looking at a chololate shake? Color me unsurprised.
That is something that needs to be pointed out more often. As a naturally very thin person, I often point out to people who mention how lucky I am to have my metabolism that I am not very famine resistant.
I also like to point out that when a country's poor people are overfed, that is a pretty damn good problem to have.
for the first time in history, the #1 (self caused) medical problem amongst the poor is OBESITY. when you think about it, it says a lot about our progress and the success of capitalism.
being poor USED to mean scraping by to get enough to eat. now, it means a diet of cheezy poofs and big macs
Whenever people complain to me about how they eat the same amount or less than so-and-so, but gain weight while the other person stays thin, they are always perplexed when I tell them that they have a more efficient metabolism.
I like to use MPGs as an analog to explain it. I tell them so-and-so is an Expedition, and you're a Civic. If you both put 10 gallons of gas in your tank, and drive 100 miles, who's going to have more gas left?
While a balanced and varied diet is important for adequate vitamins and minerals, body composition ultimately comes down to kcals in v. kcals out.
""So the fact that the ladies see a slightly heightened response when looking at a chololate shake? Color me unsurprised.""
I wonder if they would have a similar repsonse to a stack of $100 bills.
Exactly. For all of human history, except the last few generations (a blink of an eye, relatively), people have daily had to worry about starving to death. Now some of these fucks have the nerve to complain that our food supply is to easily available, cheap, and yummy? Overnutrition always beats undernutrition, esp. if you have the medical technology to treat many of the ill effects.
not to get all pedantic and shit but many obese people (and many 'skinnyfat' people as well) suffer from waaaaay too many calories, but they don't suffer from overnutrition. iow, if you eat a diet primarily of fried/processed/chemical crap, it is entirely possible, and not at all uncommon to eat a diet that is both hypercaloric (iow makes you fat as fuck) and simultaneously lacks enough nutrition (essential amino's, essential fatty acids, sufficient vitamins, minerals, phytonutrients, etc.).
in fact, it's common as hell.
^THIS
There is a high comorbidity of obesity with malnutrition. Worse, some nutient deficiencies interfere with proper metabolism and further exacerbate obesity. Also, subjectively based on my own experience, vegans tend to be malnourished.
oh god, the vegans. if there was EVER a group that reminds me of leftwing creationism (iow faux "science" and ignore all biology that conflicts with their religion), it's vegans.
vegans fucking INVENTED "skinnyfat".
as a disclaimer, i am a weight classed athlete, so managing my weight to make weight for contests incentivized me to learn a lot about nutrition. also, simply... what works and what doesn't. for pete's sake, apart from some rarely occurring yeast, the ONLY way vegans can even get b12 is from specially supplemented foods. omnivores don't have that problem
hell yes. ah, the vegans. they tend to be like leftwing creationists - completely ignorant of biology, selective in what scientific facts they accept, and willing to ignore everything, including evolution, if it contradicts their religion of veganism
they also invented skinnyfat, and it's amazing how many of them look unhealthy as fuck
i'm a weightclassed athlete, so i had to learn a lot about nutrition (for sports performance) and calorie cutting/macronutrient fiddling to make weight for contests.
I will automatically read and support the conclusions of any article that features Master Shake as the photo.
Even if the article hypothesized something preposterous, e.g. that Master Shake was cooler than Meatwad?
Ranking the characters in terms of coolness is what's preposterous, dude.
Besides, the coolest is Hand Banana. Because all he knows is ball...and good...and rape.
STEVE SMITH ALSO LIKE RAPE!! STEVE SMITH NOT RAPE HAND BANANA THOUGH. STEVE MORE INTERESTED IN FAT HIKERS IN WOODS WITH MILKSHAKE. NOT RAPE RAPE, BUT RAPE!
Steve: tonight...you.
Steve enters your home through the Fargate.
Emory: Don't you mean the Stargate?
Oglethorpe: No, ze Fargate! Because it goes far, get it!
Zis is nothing like zat movie, or ze zyndicated zeries based on ze movie, vich I've never seen, zo how could I cahpy eet!?
Zis is nothing like zat movie, or ze zyndicated zeries based on ze movie, vich I've never seen, zo how could I cahpy eet!?
+1
Handbanana is not cool. We are cool. Err and I are the coolest and most popular of all the primative characters on all of your pathetic Earth shows ever made.
Ho do you like ya tube steak??
addictions?defined as hard-to-break attachments to things that provide pleasure or relieve stress
That's the super-expansive definition favored by current public health fascists. Originally it only applied to stimuli whose denial produced observable withdrawal symptoms, excluding those necessary for human life such as water, air, and temperature regulation.
The new regulators wish to ban water and air too. How else do you think they plan to reduce CO2 emissions? Population control.
I like the way "addiction" is used now (though the conclusions the public health nazis will reach based on the definition are not so good). I think it makes more sense to call the withdrawal from a drug dependence and the more psychological aspects addiction (though some people do just the opposite). With opiates, for example, the addiction is definitely not the same thing as they physical dependance. As anyone who has ever dealt with junkies can tell you (I've seen several friends go pretty far down that road), the addiction is not over by any means once the withdrawal symptoms are finished. You may want to use different words, but I think that there is a very valuable distinction to be made between chemical dependence and psychological aspects of addiction.
the way i like to make the distinction is - do we see stuff when the person is unconscious. iow, withdrawal from the friggin' internet can cause visible and reported signs and symptoms. is that "addiction". well, it's not in the physical sense that with heroin, alcohol, etc. even a person in a coma will show signs of withdrawal. not true with milkshakes or the internet or other such psychological addictions.
the left LOVES to medicalize everything, because if it's not a matter of willpower and discipline, but instead a MEDICAL PROBLEM that fits into their "we can fix it with govt" response to everything
The problem is the connotation is still that of the old definition, which is a completely negative one. This is exactly what the nannies are counting on when they redefine addiction to include Internet use, sugar consumption, gambling, sex, etc, and why they insist on redefining that word rather than coming up with a different one.
as they inevitably do with other words like "disease" etc.
their definition of 'addiction' boils down to stuff people like to do and get bummed out when they can't do it.
I think that sounds more like Puritans, what with their ideological opposition to pleasure.
Originally it only applied to stimuli whose denial produced observable withdrawal symptoms
Like insulin.
Or pissing, clearly.
Which is necessary to human life.
That said, excess insulin can lead to an amazing array of problems, including carbohydrate addiction. Ask a few obese people about going on an Atkins-style regimen and I bet you'll hear, "Oh! I could never give my bread!"
And, yes, when I first did it, I did have physical withdrawal symptoms. Two and a half days.
they COULD give up bread. they just are undisciplined fucks who want to believe that it's beyond their control, because that makes it easier to excuse. i'm not a huge fan of ketogenic diets as "the solution", although i think they have their place. but given that, almost any obese person could make massive improvements in improving their bf% by significantly reducing processed carbs
Ketogenic diets are very effective for short term rapid weightloss. The main problem is when people stop them they tend to gain back all that weight plus some. Without getting too technical, while on a very low-carb diet, the metabolism actually adjusts to burn carbs slower to reserve available glucose for the CNS while using ketone bodies and proteins to fuel the rest of the body. When someone comes off the diet, they need to reintroduce carbs very gradually, so their body can adjust and start using them as the primary fuel source once again.
a friend of mine actually (literally) wrote the book on ketogenic diets, called (lol) "the ketogenic diet by Lyle McDonald". i'm just saying that i'm not a huge fan of them. i think the classic ketogenic diet doesn't differentiate enough between "bad" and "good" fats, overprocessed stuff, chemical stuff, etc. i think the paleos (who may be nimrods in other ways) are a bit better at understanding that it may help you lose fat, but it is not HEALTHY to eat metric assloads of saturated, let alone transfats.
granted, i was a big fan of udo erasmus from the beginning
And when I did it, I started gaining weight rapidly, so I stopped. But at least my diarrhea stopped during it...to be replaced by constipation!
like masturbating.
Unfortunately the longest a recovering food addict has gone without food is 50 days or so. Relapse or die, it's a cruel world.
What's the record for carbohydrate (sugar, starch) addicts?
How long until we see "addicting" foods under the purview of the DEA? Why do researchers even give a shit, unless the entire point is to set up the framework in which we will "need" some form of governmental regulatory body.
You know I love that organic cooking
I always ask for more
And they call me Mr Natural
On down to the health food store
I only eat good sea salt
White sugar don't touch my lips
And my friends is always begging me
To take them on macrobiotic trips
Yes, they are
Oh, but at night I stake out my strong box
That I keep under lock and key
And I take it off to my closet
Where nobody else can see
I open that door so slowly
Take a peek up north and south
Then I pull out a Hostess Twinkie
And I pop it in my mouth
Yeah, in the daytime I'm Mr Natural
Just as healthy as I can be
But at night I'm a junk food junkie
Good lord have pity on me
Well, at lunchtime you can always find me
At the Whole Earth Vitamin Bar
Just sucking on my plain white yogurt
From my hand thrown pottery jar
And sippin' a little hand pressed cider
With a carrot stick for dessert
And wiping my face in a natural way
On the sleeve of my peasant shirt
Oh, yeah
Ah, but when that clock strikes midnight
And I'm all by myself
I work that combination on my secret hideaway shelf
And I pull out some Fritos corn chips
Dr Pepper and an ole Moon Pie
Then I sit back in glorious expectation
Of a genuine junk food high
Oh yeah, in the daytime I'm Mr Natural
Just as healthy as I can be
Oh, but at night I'm a junk food junkie
Good lord have pity on me
My friends down at the commune
They think I'm pretty neat
Oh, I don't know nothing about arts and crafts
But I give 'em all something to eat
I'm a friend to old Euell Gibbons
And I only eat home grown spice
I got a John Keats autographed Grecian urn
Filled up with my brown rice
Yes, I do
Oh, folks but lately I hae been spotted
With a Big Mac on my breath
Stumbling into a Colonel Sanders
With a face as white as death
I'm aftraid someday they'll find me
Just stretched out on my bed
With a handful of Pringles potato chips
And a Ding Dong by my head
In the daytime I'm Mr Natural
Just as healthy as I can be
But at night I'm a junk food junkie
Good lord have pity on me
saw corky siegel perform that live back in the 70's
that's exactly the point and that is why they do it. it's out of people's control. thus, we need people from the govt. who are here to help us...
a chocolate milkshake and a line of cocaine might not be so different
I knew it!
You'd snort a milkshake off a hooker's ass?
Try getting a stripper to come home with you for a chocolate milkshake.
If you told them that, and they went home with you, then "chocolate milkshake" is probably slang for something either 1) incredibly awesome, or 2) incredibly gross. Either way, you're on the hook for it once you get to the house.
I'm so glad I'm at work and can't reach urban dictionary to find out where this is going.
Someplace tasty, I assure you
""a chocolate milkshake and a line of cocaine might not be so different"'
The Charlie Sheen defense? Come on judge, cocaine, milkshake, they are not so different.
Sure go ahead and snort that chocolate milkshake - you'll find out just how different they are.
In other words, "tasty." What an ass.
Or, as the immensely cute 2 year old boy my daughter babysits puts it: "DeeeeeeeRISHous!"
Kids. God makes 'em cute so you don't kill 'em.
or eat them.
Which puts me in mind of the commercial for some product I can't remember...Video: kids running around, getting into adorable shenanigans. Mom, in voiceover: "When my kids were little, they were so cute I just wanted to eat them up! Some days, I wish I had."
A lousy commercial in the sense that I can't remember what the hell they were trying to sell, but a great line.
Not true.
"God makes 'em cute so you don't kill 'em."
Same deal with puppies.
No surprise here. Americans are addicted to food, Facebook, video games, blackberries, crime, war, iphones, tweeting, texting, celebrity, internet porn, and prescription drugs according to the new book "Addict Nation." This is an enlightening read on all kinds of addictions in the U.S. and delves into the issue of brain chemistry extensively. The reviews of the book are good at http://addictnation.org and Amazon
Wow. I never new I was such an.... "addict." Oxygen, water, masturbating, food, chocolate, Sugarfree/Warty/Epi/ProL Gangbangs, sunlight, freedom. Clearly,I need help.
The government is fully prepared to help you break your addiction to freedom.
I can quit milkshakes any time I want to. Boy, do I not want to.
"Anyone who has considered the research on patterns of drug use knows there is no such thing as an ineluctably addictive drug" I don't actually know what "ineluctably" means and don't feel much like looking it up, but I will say, based on my experience with legal pharmaceutical type drugs, that there are some compound that are very, very difficult to stop ingesting due to the side effects of quitting once your body has become acclimated to them.
I'm pretty sure it means something like inevitable or unavoidable. I think someone gave Sullum a thesaurus.
Reminds me of the Southpark where Kyle's dad got a DUI. He went to AA, where he learned he had a disease called addiction. He's in a wheelchair, with the plaid blanket on his legs, telling Kyle that he can't help himself, you see, because he has a disease !
thank you