Food and Behaviour Research

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121 to 140 of 1000 News results (date descending)

Do food additives cause symptoms of ADHD? It’s more complicated than you think

Date: 13/08/2025

Plans are afoot to start phasing out eight synthetic food dyes in the American food supply, with claims they are harmful and are linked to ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder). This has reignited a long-running debate around this subject.


Mental health care needs urgent reform to include lifestyle interventions, claims report

Date: 13/08/2025

Mental health services must urgently increase investment in lifestyle interventions to improve care and help close the 15-year life expectancy gap faced by people with mental illness, a Lancet Psychiatry Commission report warns.


Maternal obesity linked to autism-like behaviours in offspring

Date: 12/08/2025

Aa mechanistic link between maternal obesity prior to pregnancy and autism-related behavioral outcomes in offspring has been uncovered in a study conducted at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa.


FDA Petition Could Redefine the Future of America’s Food System

Date: 06/08/2025

It has been four decades since the FDA reviewed the scientific basis of GRAS status of processed refined carbohydrates. It has been during those four decades that America’s obesity crisis has emerged. This petition demonstrates that, based on the lack of scientific evidence, continued GRAS affirmation is neither legal nor credible.


Study shows culinary medicine improves trainee nutrition education

Date: 04/08/2025

Yale School of Medicine (YSM) researchers have led the first-ever randomized controlled trial of a culinary medicine curriculum for medical trainees, which found that hands-on cooking is an effective approach to increasing nutrition knowledge for resident physicians.


Less processed diet may be more beneficial for weight loss, clinical trial indicates

Date: 04/08/2025

When given nutritionally matched diets, participants lost twice as much weight eating minimally processed foods compared to ultra-processed foods, suggesting that cutting down on processing could help to sustain a healthy weight long term, finds a new clinical trial led by researchers at UCL and UCLH.


Metabolic Health in Schizophrenia: Toward Nutritional and Metabolism-Based Strategies in Psychiatry

Date: 04/08/2025

It is widely known that obesity, particularly abdominal obesity, significantly contributes to the progression of metabolic syndrome (MetS), with a prevalence as high as 75% in individuals with psychotic illness. Obesity-related metabolic disturbances significantly increase mortality in schizophrenia, with schizophrenia often preceding obesity, especially in younger patients.


What animal studies reveal about binge-eating behavior

Date: 01/08/2025

Binge eating, especially on high-fat, high-sugar foods, can rewire the brain and alter behavior, leading to compulsive food-seeking and a greater likelihood of overeating instead of under-eating when stressed. It can also contribute to long-term physical health problems, according to a new review of animal studies.


Fast food, screens, and no greens: A recipe for teen health trouble

Date: 31/07/2025

When a cheeseburger costs less than a punnet of strawberries, it's clear the odds are stacked against healthy choices—especially for teenagers.


A single artificially sweetened soft drink daily may increase diabetes risk by more than a third

Date: 30/07/2025

Drinking just one can of artificially-sweetened soft drink a day may increase the risk of developing type 2 diabetes by 38%, an Australian study has found


Ultra-processed foods trigger addictive behaviours meeting clinical criteria, researchers say

Date: 28/07/2025

New research makes the strongest case yet that ultra-processed foods—including chips, cookies, soda and other heavily engineered products—aren't just tempting; they can actually be addictive.


Now is the time to recognize and respond to addiction to ultra-processed foods

Date: 25/07/2025

Reflecting the growing consensus that addiction science could inform food policy, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and National Institutes of Health (NIH) have announced a new initiative modeled on the successful Tobacco Regulatory Science Program, which will unite both agencies’ expertise to “transform nutrition and food-related research”.


How B vitamins can affect brain and heart health

Date: 24/07/2025

Eight essential nutrients make up the suite of B vitamins also known as the B complex. Research at Tufts and elsewhere has revealed that these B vitamins influence a vast spectrum of human health and disease, including cognitive function, cardiovascular health, gastric bypass recovery, neural tube defects, and even cancer.


Could the copper in your diet help prevent memory loss, as new study suggests?

Date: 24/07/2025

More and more research suggests that the copper in your diet could play a bigger role in brain health than we once believed. A recent study found that older Americans who ate more copper-rich foods did better on memory and concentration tests.


A popular sweetener could be damaging your brain’s defences, says recent study

Date: 21/07/2025

Found in everything from protein bars to energy drinks, erythritol has long been considered a safe alternative to sugar. But new research suggests this widely used sweetener may be quietly undermining one of the body’s most crucial protective barriers – with potentially serious consequences for heart health and stroke risk.


Soft drinks can affect communication of gut bacteria and immune system

Date: 21/07/2025

Consumption of soft drinks, supplemented with white sugar, alters the DNA of gut bacteria and affects the host immune system. The good news? These effects are reversible.


Dietary Trial Shows Benefits of a Low Emulsifier Diet for Crohn’s Disease

Date: 18/07/2025

WASHINGTON, DC — A low-emulsifier-containing diet led to a threefold increased likelihood of improvement in symptoms of Crohn’s disease compared with an emulsifier-containing diet in a randomized double-blind dietary trial involving 154 patients with mildly active disease living across the United Kingdom.



About a third of pregnant women in the US lack sufficient vitamin D to support healthy pregnancies − new research

Date: 18/07/2025

Children whose mothers had higher vitamin D levels during pregnancy scored better on tests of memory, attention and problem-solving skills at ages 7 to 12 compared with those whose mothers had lower levels. That is a key finding of a new peer-reviewed study published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.


New research finds changing your diet could ease persistent headaches after brain injury

Date: 17/07/2025

A new clinical trial demonstrates that dietary changes significantly reduce persistent post-traumatic headaches (pPTH), a common and debilitating consequence of traumatic brain injury (TBI). Researchers from the UNC School of Medicine, the Uniformed Services University, and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) found that increasing omega-3 fatty acids (commonly found in fatty fish like salmon and tuna) while reducing omega-6 fatty acids (abundant in seed oils such as corn, sunflower, and cottonseed oils) led to fewer and less severe headaches.