Thursday, February 20, 2020

Researchers find a western-style diet can impair brain function | Science | The Guardian

Researchers find a western-style diet can impair brain function | Science | The Guardian: After seven days on a high fat, high added sugar diet, volunteers scored worse on memory tests





Consuming a Western diet for as little as one week can subtly impair brain function and encourage slim and otherwise healthy young people to overeat, scientists claim.
Researchers found that after seven days on a high fat, high added sugar diet, volunteers in their 20s scored worse on memory tests and found junk food more desirable immediately after they had finished a meal.
The finding suggests that a western diet makes it harder for people to regulate their appetite, and points to disruption in a brain region called the hippocampus as the possible cause.
“After a week on a western-style diet, palatable food such as snacks and chocolate becomes more desirable when you are full,” said Richard Stevenson, a professor of psychology at Macquarie University in Sydney. “This will make it harder to resist, leading you to eat more, which in turn generates more damage to the hippocampus and a vicious cycle of overeating.”




Previous work in animals has shown that junk food impairs the hippocampus, a brain region involved in memory and appetite control. It is unclear why, but one idea is that the hippocampus normally blocks or weakens memories about food when we are full, so looking at a cake does not flood the mind with memories of how nice cake can be. “When the hippocampus functions less efficiently, you do get this flood of memories, and so food is more appealing,” Stevenson said.
To investigate how the western diet affects humans, the scientists recruited 110 lean and healthy students, aged 20 to 23, who generally ate a good diet. Half were randomly assigned to a control group who ate their normal diet for a week. The other half were put on a high energy western-style diet, which featured a generous intake of Belgian waffles and fast food.
At the start and end of the week, the volunteers ate breakfast in the lab. Before and after the meal, they completed word memory tests and scored a range of high-sugar foods, such as Coco Pops, Frosties and Froot Loops, according to how much they wanted and then liked the foods on eating them.
“The more desirable people find the palatable food when full, following the western-style diet, the more impaired they were on the test of hippocampal function,” Stevenson said. The finding suggests that disruption of the hippocampus may underpin both, he added.
Stevenson believes that in time governments will come under pressure to impose restrictions on processed food, much as they did to deter smoking. “Demonstrating that processed foods can lead to subtle cognitive impairments that affect appetite and serve to promote overeating in otherwise healthy young people should be a worrying finding for everyone,” he said. The work is published in Royal Society Open Science.
In the longer term, eating a western-style diet contributes to obesity and diabetes, both of which have been linked to declines in brain performance and the risk of developing dementia. “The new thinking here is the realisation that a western-style diet may be generating initial and fairly subtle cognitive impairments, that undermine the control of appetite which gradually opens the way for all of these other effects down the track,” Stevenson said.
Rachel Batterham, professor of obesity, diabetes and endocrinology at University College London, who was not involved in the study, said it was one of the first to investigate whether the western diet impairs memory and appetite control in humans.
“Understanding the impact of a western diet on brain function is a matter of urgency given the current food climate,” she said. “This research has provided data to support detrimental effects on both memory and appetite control after just one week of an energy-dense diet and may suggest a link between poor diet and impairment of the hippocampus, a key memory and appetite-associated brain region. The mechanisms at work remain to be elucidated and will require further research with the application of more sophisticated neuroimaging methods.”




https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medical/western-diet-can-impair-brain-function-study-finds/ar-BB10bveq

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Black Pug Dog Personalized Planner

Black Pug Dog Personalized Planner | 



Black Pug Dog Portrait.A gorgeous and handsome black Pug Dog digital oil painting portrait. Wearing a striped shirt and giving a side gaze/whale eye, with a dark grunge brown background. Rich neutral, earth-toned colors with a rustic and distressed look. Pugs have a remarkable and charming personality, despite its small size. Ready to be personalized with your name on the back, and the year on the front. Fully customizable.

Friday, February 14, 2020

Beautiful Big Cats Photograph Calendar

Beautiful Big Cats Photograph Calendar | Zazzle.com: Beautiful Big Cats Photograph Calendar
Beautiful Big Cats Photography; Lions, Tigers, Leopards, and Cheetahs. Only the most gorgeous wildcat photos were chosen for this Calendar. With rich golden colors. The neutral colors will blend well in any room of the house. Ready for you to enter the year.

Canadian consumers stung by cellphone porting scam: ‘It’s the creepiest thing’

Canadian consumers stung by cellphone porting scam: ‘It’s the creepiest thing’: With the unintended help of her phone company, a scammer was able to seize Carolyn Morgan's phone number.



A new message from her phone provider, Rogers, came as a surprise.
"I read it twice," Morgan told Global News.
Then, she said, something clicked. Something wasn't right.
The message read: "Rogers has received a request to transfer your phone number to another Service Provider. If you did not authorize, contact Rogers urgently..." and went on to provide a toll-free telephone number.
The Toronto woman says she hadn't made any request to transfer her number, a practice known in the wireless industry as porting.
Typically, porting occurs when a wireless customer wants to switch phone providers but wishes to keep their existing phone number.
Following instructions on the text, Morgan immediately called Rogers to tell the company she hadn't placed an order. She says she waited on hold for 24 minutes before her line died.
"That's when I realized, 'oh, there's no phone service,'" she said.
At that moment, her number had been switched. A scammer, with the unintended aid of her phone company, had seized her number.
When the line went dead, she logged onto Rogers' chat service and reported the unauthorized switch to a Rogers agent, who confirmed the line had been ported.
Morgan says the agent promised the company would try to get it back.
But it took about 20 hours before Rogers restored her number. She says she had to call the company a second time to remind them.
In that period, she says cyber-thieves were able to use her phone account to change her email passwords and access her banking information.  A credit card company reported an unauthorized $700 purchase.
With access to her phone number and the ability to receive and send messages on it, thieves could override what's known as two-factor authentication used to secure accounts.
Two-factor authentication allows a consumer to receive a text message with a code to prove they are the authorized account holder.
At one point, Morgan says she was attempting to restore an email account while the scammer was also using it and looting personal information.
"It's the creepiest thing," Morgan told Global News in an interview.


She's one of a growing number of Canadians to fall victim to this kind of scam, one Canada's wireless industry says it's trying to wrestle with.
"Unfortunately, there are criminals who are using illegally-obtained personal data to defraud consumers in a variety of ways and across industries," said a spokesperson for the Canadian Wireless Telecommunications Association, also known as the CWTA.
"Unauthorized phone number transfers are one example."
Rogers told Global News it is attempting to guard against fraud involving customers' accounts.
“We take protecting our customers’ personal information very seriously, and as fraudsters evolve their tactics, we work with other carriers to continually strengthen processes to prevent unauthorized porting, including new protections put in place this past fall," a spokesperson said in a written statement.
In 2008, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) stated that wireless carriers should carry out number porting within two and a half hours.
A customer service representative who spoke to Morgan by phone in the presence of Global News said it was not the company's responsibility to compensate customers who suffered a financial loss for fraud. Nor would the representative agree to offer her identity theft monitoring, which is frequently provided to credit and loyalty card customers whose accounts are hacked.
Morgan says she feels let down by Rogers, which she says ought to have acted more carefully before allowing her number to be given to a scammer.
"They handed the fraudsters the keys to the kingdom by not double or triple-checking...to make sure I requested the port, that’s what frustrated me the most."