Affordable Access

Publisher Website

Overnight fasting affects avoidance learning and relief.

Authors
  • Papalini, Silvia1, 2
  • Neefs, Laura1
  • Beckers, Tom2, 3
  • Oudenhove, Lukas Van2, 4, 5
  • Vervliet, Bram1, 2
  • 1 Laboratory of Biological Psychology, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium. , (Belgium)
  • 2 Leuven Brain Institute, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium. , (Belgium)
  • 3 Centre for the Psychology of Learning and Experimental Psychopathology, Faculty of Psychology & Educational Sciences, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium. , (Belgium)
  • 4 Laboratory for Brain-Gut Axis Studies, Translational Research Center for Gastrointestinal Disorders, Department of Chronic Diseases and Metabolism, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium. , (Belgium)
  • 5 Cognitive & Affective Neuroscience Lab, Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, USA.
Type
Published Article
Journal
Nutritional Neuroscience
Publisher
Maney Publishing
Publication Date
Sep 01, 2023
Volume
26
Issue
9
Pages
850–863
Identifiers
DOI: 10.1080/1028415X.2022.2103068
PMID: 35943328
Source
Medline
Keywords
Language
English
License
Unknown

Abstract

Objectives: prolonged fasting influences threat and reward processing, two fundamental systems underpinning adaptive behaviors. In animals, overnight fasting sensitizes the mesolimbic-dopaminergic activity governing avoidance, reward, and fearextinction learning. Despite evidence that overnight fasting may also affect reward and fear learning in humans, effects on human avoidance learning have not been studied yet. Here, we examined the effects of 16 h-overnight fasting on instrumental avoidance and relief from threat omission.Methods: to this end, 50 healthy women were randomly assigned to a Fasting (N = 25) or a Re-feeding group (N = 25) and performed an Avoidance-Relief Task.Results: we found that fasting decreases unnecessary avoidance during signaled safety; this effect was mediated via a reduction in relief pleasantness during signaled absence of threat. A fasting-induced reduction in relief was also found during fear extinction learning.Discussion: we conclude that fasting optimizes avoidance and safety learning. Future studies should test whether these effects also hold for anxious individuals.

Report this publication

Statistics

Seen <100 times