Food and non‐alcoholic beverage marketing in children and adults: A systematic review and activation likelihood estimation meta‐analysis of functional magnetic resonance imaging studies

Author:

Boyland Emma1ORCID,Maden Michelle2,Coates Anna E.1,Masterson Travis D.3,Alblas Monique C.4ORCID,Bruce Amanda S.5,Roberts Carl A.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

2. Liverpool Reviews and Implementation Group University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

3. Department of Nutritional Sciences The Pennsylvania State University Pennsylvania USA

4. Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR) University of Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

5. Department of Pediatrics University of Kansas Medical Center Kansas USA

Abstract

SummaryFood marketing impacts the food behaviors of children and adults, but the underpinning neural mechanisms are poorly understood. This systematic review and meta‐analysis pooled evidence from neuroimaging studies of exposure to food marketing stimuli (vs. control) on brain activations in children and adults to clarify regions associated with responding. Databases were searched for articles published to March 2022. Inclusion criteria included human functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies employing a contrast between a food marketing stimulus and a non‐food/non‐exposure control, published in English in a peer‐reviewed journal, reporting whole brain (not Region of Interest [ROI] only) co‐ordinates. Eleven studies met inclusion criteria, of which eight were included in the quantitative synthesis (Activation Likelihood Estimation [ALE] meta‐analysis). Food marketing exposures (vs. controls) produced greater activation in two clusters lying across the middle occipital gyrus, lingual gyrus, and cuneus (cluster 1), and the postcentral gyrus, precentral gyrus, and the inferior parietal lobule/supramarginal gyrus (cluster 2). Brain responses to food marketing are most consistently observed in areas relating to visual processing, attention, sensorimotor activity, and emotional processing. Subgroup analyses (e.g., adults vs. children) were not possible because of the paucity of data, and sensitivity analyses highlighted some instability in the clusters; therefore, conclusions remain tentative pending further research.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

Reference77 articles.

1. Association of Food and Nonalcoholic Beverage Marketing With Children and Adolescents’ Eating Behaviors and Health

2. The effect of screen advertising on children's dietary intake: a systematic review and meta‐analysis;Russell SJ;Obes Rev,2018

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