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Junk Food Exposure Disrupts Selection of Food-Seeking Actions in Rats
2018
Frontiers in Psychiatry
There is growing evidence that repeated consumption of highly palatable, nutritionally poor "junk food" diets can produce deficits in cognition and behavioral control. We explored whether long-term junk-food diet exposure disrupts rats' ability to make adaptive choices about which foods to pursue based on (1) expected reward value (outcome devaluation test) and (2) cue-evoked reward expectations (Pavlovian-to-instrumental test). Rats were initially food restricted and trained on two distinct
doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00350
pmid:30166974
fatcat:huwsfwuofvc3plnwde7ou6zh5q