How Sweets And Chocolate Rewire Our Brains

When presented with certain foods, such as sweets, chocolate, and chips, our brains acquire a predilection for them.

<p><strong>Cubes of chocolate and berries are displayed on a flat surface. Eating foods high in sugar and fat, including sweets and chocolate, rewires our brains to instinctively favor delectable but dangerous delicacies, reveals a new study. LISA FOTIOS/PEXELS</strong></p>

Eating food high in sugar and fat – such as sweets and chocolate – rewires our brains to unconsciously prefer delicious but unhealthy treats, shows a new study.

Our brains learn to prefer foods such as sweets, chocolate, cake, and chips – and respond positively when fed them, say scientists.

The study from scientists based in Germany measured the brain activity of a lucky group given a dessert high in fat and sugar each day for two months.

They found that the brain reactions of those given the pudding significantly increased after eight weeks – particularly activating the region responsible for motivation and reward and releasing dopamine.

The study’s authors concluded that our brains learn to subconsciously prefer and crave these fatty and sugary foods – even when we stop eating them.

The research team, from the Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research in Cologne, western Germany, tested their hypothesis by selecting two groups of volunteers.

One lucky group was given a small pudding containing high levels of fat and sugar each day for eight weeks, to be eaten alongside their normal diet.

Another not-so-lucky control group received a daily dessert which contained the exact same amount of calories – but less fat.

The brain activity of the volunteers in both groups was measured before and during the eight-week experiment.

The study team, led by Dr. Marc Tittgemeyer, observed that the brain’s responses to sugar and fat-rich foods in the group that ate the daily high-fat and sugar dessert were greatly increased after the eight weeks.

Chocolate Easter bunnies at a grocery store in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on Mar 11, 2023. Eating foods high in sugar and fat, such as sweets and chocolate, rewires our brains to favor tasty but unhealthy items instinctively. CREATIVE TOUCH IMAGING LTD/GETTY IMAGES

This increased activity especially activated the “dopaminergic” system – which releases the feel-good hormone dopamine in the region of the brain responsible for motivation and reward.

Dopamine releases give us a sense of pleasure and the motivation to do something when we’re feeling pleasure.

Every time we do something we enjoy – such as having sex, eating food we like or exercising – small amounts of dopamine are released into our brains.

However, vices such as drinking alcohol and taking recreational drugs can also cause the release of dopamine.

Tittgemeyer explained that our brains learn to prefer foods high in sugar and fat due to the cerebral activity – such as dopamine release – we experience when we eat them.

He said: “Our measurements of brain activity showed that the brain rewires itself through the consumption of chips and co.

“It subconsciously learns to prefer rewarding food.

“Through these changes in the brain, we will unconsciously always prefer the foods that contain a lot of fat and sugar.”

Sharmili Edwin Thanarajah, another lead author of the study, added: “Our tendency to eat high-fat and high-sugar foods – the so-called Western diet – could be innate or develop as a result of being overweight.

“But we think that the brain learns this preference.”

During the study, the volunteers who gorged on the daily high-fat and sugar dessert didn’t gain more weight than those in the control group.

Their blood values, including blood sugar and cholesterol levels, didn’t change either.

But Tittgemeyer and his team believe the preference for sugary and fatty foods in the test group will continue after the end of the study, as the brain neglects to forget it enjoys unhealthy foods.

“New connections are made in the brain, and they don’t dissolve so quickly,” Dr Tittgemeyers says.

“After all, the whole point of learning is that once you learn something, you don’t forget it so quickly.”

Produced in association with SWNS Talker