Abstract

Subjective values for food rewards guide our dietary choices. There is growing evidence that value signals are constructed in the brain by integrating multiple types of information about flavor, taste, and nutritional attributes of the foods. However, much less is known about the influence of food-extrinsic factors such as labels, brands, prices, and packaging designs. In this mini-review article, we outline recent findings in decision neuroscience, consumer psychology, and food science about the effect of extrinsic factors on food value computations in the human brain. To date, studies have demonstrated that, while the integrated value signal is encoded in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, information on the extrinsic factors of the food is encoded in diverse brain regions previously implicated in a wide range of functions: cognitive control, memory, emotion and reward processing. We suggest that a comprehensive understanding of food valuation requires elucidation of the mechanisms behind integrating extrinsic factors in the brain to compute an overall subjective value signal.

Highlights

  • The valuation of food is central in our daily decision-making about what to eat

  • How is it the value signal for a food reward is constructed in the human brain? Previous studies suggest that individuals compute the value of a food item by integrating

  • Consumer psychology and food science have a long history of demonstrating that our preference for a food reward is modulated by higher-order extrinsic factors

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Summary

Extrinsic Factors Underlying Food Valuation in the Human Brain

Much less is known about the influence of food-extrinsic factors such as labels, brands, prices, and packaging designs. In this mini-review article, we outline recent findings in decision neuroscience, consumer psychology, and food science about the effect of extrinsic factors on food value computations in the human brain. Studies have demonstrated that, while the integrated value signal is encoded in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, information on the extrinsic factors of the food is encoded in diverse brain regions previously implicated in a wide range of functions: cognitive control, memory, emotion and reward processing. We suggest that a comprehensive understanding of food valuation requires elucidation of the mechanisms behind integrating extrinsic factors in the brain to compute an overall subjective value signal

INTRODUCTION
Extrinsic Factors Underlying Food Valuation
EXTRINSIC FACTORS OF FOOD VALUATION
Social Information
Packaging Design
Findings
DISCUSSION
Full Text
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