Obese women 'show signs of food learning impairment'
Obese women may have a "food learning impairment" that could explain their attitude to food, research from Yale School of Medicine suggests.
Tests on groups of obese and healthy-weight people found that the obese women performed worst when asked to remember a sequence of food picture cards, the BBC reports.
Writing in Current Biology, Yale researchers tested 135 men and women.
The findings could lead to new ways to tackle obesity, the study says.
Study author Ifat Levy, assistant professor at Yale School of Medicine, said the difference in the performance of the obese women compared with the other groups was "really striking" and "significant."
The tests looked at an individual's ability to learn and predict the appearance of pictures of food or money on coloured cards.
The participants were told they would be given whatever appeared on these "reward" cards.
In the first phase, the reward cards always followed a particular coloured card in a sequence. Later, the order was changed and the reward cards appeared following a different coloured card.
During this time, participants were asked to predict the likelihood of a reward card appearing as the cards were shown one by one.
The results showed that obese women performed worst because they overestimated how often the pictures of food, including pretzels or chocolate, appeared.
Even after researchers had accounted for other factors, there was still a large difference in their learning performance.
Prof Levy said: "This is not a general learning impairment, as obese women had no problem learning when the reward was money rather than food.
"An intriguing possibility is that, by modifying flawed association between food and environmental cues, we may be able to change eating patterns."
The study said it was not clear what lay behind the learning deficit in obese women.
In contrast, obese men did not show any signs of a food learning impairment.
The study suggested that women who are obese act this way because of particular concerns about food or because they feel more unhappy or dissatisfied about their body image.