Abstract
ABSTRACTHumans make decisions about food every day. The visual system provides important information that forms a basis for these food decisions. Although previous research has focused on visual object and category representations in the brain, it is still unclear how visually presented food is encoded by the brain. Here, we investigate the time-course of food representations in the brain. We used time-resolved multivariate analyses of electroencephalography (EEG) data, obtained from human participants (both sexes), to determine which food features are represented in the brain, and whether focused attention is needed for this. We recorded EEG while participants engaged in one of two tasks. In one task the stimuli were task relevant, whereas in the other task the stimuli were not task relevant. Our findings indicate that the brain can differentiate between food and non-food items from approximately 112 milliseconds after stimulus onset. The neural signal contained information about food naturalness, how much the food was transformed, as well as the perceived caloric content. This information was present regardless of the task. Information about the perceived immediate edibility of the food, however, was only present when the food was task relevant and presented at a slow presentation rate. Furthermore, the recorded brain activity correlated with the behavioural responses in an odd-item-out task. The fast representation of these food features, along with the finding that this information is used to guide food categorisation decision-making, suggests that these features are important dimensions along which the representation of foods is organised.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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