How sugar affects the brain - Nicole Avena

16,430,625 views ・ 2014-01-07

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:06
Picture warm, gooey cookies,
0
6825
2252
00:09
crunchy candies, velvety cakes,
1
9101
2951
00:12
waffle cones piled high with ice cream.
2
12076
2594
00:14
Is your mouth watering?
3
14693
1953
00:16
Are you craving dessert?
4
16670
1197
00:17
Why?
5
17891
1031
00:18
What happens in the brain that makes sugary foods so hard to resist?
6
18946
4730
00:23
Sugar is a general term used to describe a class of molecules
7
23700
3389
00:27
called carbohydrates,
8
27113
1290
00:28
and it's found in a wide variety of food and drink.
9
28427
2827
00:31
Just check the labels on sweet products you buy.
10
31278
3140
00:34
Glucose, fructose, sucrose,
11
34442
2468
00:36
maltose, lactose, dextrose, and starch
12
36934
2849
00:39
are all forms of sugar.
13
39807
1955
00:41
So are high-fructose corn syrup,
14
41786
1931
00:43
fruit juice, raw sugar, and honey.
15
43741
2529
00:46
And sugar isn't just in candies and desserts,
16
46709
2929
00:49
it's also added to tomato sauce,
17
49662
1524
00:51
yogurt, dried fruit, flavored waters, or granola bars.
18
51188
4488
00:55
Since sugar is everywhere, it's important to understand
19
55700
2963
00:58
how it affects the brain.
20
58687
1195
00:59
What happens when sugar hits your tongue?
21
59906
2345
01:02
And does eating a little bit of sugar make you crave more?
22
62275
2931
01:05
You take a bite of cereal.
23
65753
1570
01:07
The sugars it contains activate the sweet-taste receptors,
24
67347
3157
01:10
part of the taste buds on the tongue.
25
70528
2218
01:12
These receptors send a signal up to the brain stem,
26
72770
2977
01:15
and from there, it forks off into many areas of the forebrain,
27
75771
3466
01:19
one of which is the cerebral cortex.
28
79261
2528
01:21
Different sections of the cerebral cortex process different tastes:
29
81813
4170
01:26
bitter, salty, umami,
30
86007
1964
01:27
and, in our case, sweet.
31
87995
1804
01:29
From here, the signal activates the brain's reward system.
32
89823
3593
01:33
This reward system is a series of electrical and chemical pathways
33
93440
3661
01:37
across several different regions of the brain.
34
97125
2600
01:39
It's a complicated network,
35
99749
1286
01:41
but it helps answer a single, subconscious question:
36
101059
3425
01:44
should I do that again?
37
104508
1345
01:45
That warm, fuzzy feeling you get when you taste Grandma's chocolate cake?
38
105877
3600
01:49
That's your reward system saying,
39
109501
1879
01:51
"Mmm, yes!"
40
111404
1512
01:52
And it's not just activated by food.
41
112940
2333
01:55
Socializing, sexual behavior, and drugs
42
115297
2286
01:57
are just a few examples of things and experiences
43
117607
3103
02:00
that also activate the reward system.
44
120734
2543
02:03
But overactivating this reward system kickstarts a series of unfortunate events:
45
123301
5344
02:08
loss of control, craving, and increased tolerance to sugar.
46
128669
3631
02:13
Let's get back to our bite of cereal.
47
133158
2073
02:15
It travels down into your stomach and eventually into your gut.
48
135255
3633
02:18
And guess what?
49
138912
1013
02:19
There are sugar receptors here, too.
50
139949
2407
02:22
They are not taste buds, but they do send signals
51
142380
2351
02:24
telling your brain that you're full
52
144755
1808
02:26
or that your body should produce more insulin
53
146587
2143
02:28
to deal with the extra sugar you're eating.
54
148754
2225
02:31
The major currency of our reward system is dopamine,
55
151596
2943
02:34
an important chemical or neurotransmitter.
56
154563
2566
02:37
There are many dopamine receptors in the forebrain,
57
157153
2507
02:39
but they're not evenly distributed.
58
159684
2132
02:41
Certain areas contain dense clusters of receptors,
59
161840
2784
02:44
and these dopamine hot spots are a part of our reward system.
60
164648
3663
02:48
Drugs like alcohol, nicotine, or heroin
61
168898
2651
02:51
send dopamine into overdrive,
62
171573
1769
02:53
leading some people to constantly seek that high,
63
173366
3059
02:56
in other words, to be addicted.
64
176449
1721
02:58
Sugar also causes dopamine to be released, though not as violently as drugs.
65
178645
4887
03:03
And sugar is rare among dopamine-inducing foods.
66
183556
3109
03:06
Broccoli, for example, has no effect,
67
186689
1939
03:08
which probably explains
68
188652
1436
03:10
why it's so hard to get kids to eat their veggies.
69
190112
2701
03:13
Speaking of healthy foods,
70
193295
1556
03:14
let's say you're hungry and decide to eat a balanced meal.
71
194875
2815
03:17
You do, and dopamine levels spike in the reward system hot spots.
72
197714
3611
03:21
But if you eat that same dish many days in a row,
73
201349
3357
03:24
dopamine levels will spike less and less, eventually leveling out.
74
204730
4244
03:28
That's because when it comes to food,
75
208998
1762
03:30
the brain evolved to pay special attention to new or different tastes.
76
210784
4147
03:34
Why?
77
214955
1106
03:36
Two reasons:
78
216085
1160
03:37
first, to detect food that's gone bad.
79
217269
2516
03:39
And second, because the more variety we have in our diet,
80
219809
2920
03:42
the more likely we are to get all the nutrients we need.
81
222753
3099
03:45
To keep that variety up,
82
225876
1351
03:47
we need to be able to recognize a new food,
83
227251
2388
03:49
and more importantly, we need to want to keep eating new foods.
84
229663
3857
03:53
And that's why the dopamine levels off when a food becomes boring.
85
233544
3799
03:57
Now, back to that meal.
86
237367
1575
03:58
What happens if in place of the healthy, balanced dish,
87
238966
3102
04:02
you eat sugar-rich food instead?
88
242092
2191
04:04
If you rarely eat sugar or don't eat much at a time,
89
244307
3008
04:07
the effect is similar to that of the balanced meal.
90
247339
2610
04:09
But if you eat too much, the dopamine response does not level out.
91
249973
3729
04:13
In other words, eating lots of sugar will continue to feel rewarding.
92
253726
3995
04:17
In this way, sugar behaves a little bit like a drug.
93
257745
3384
04:21
It's one reason people seem to be hooked on sugary foods.
94
261153
3444
04:24
So, think back to all those different kinds of sugar.
95
264621
2892
04:27
Each one is unique, but every time any sugar is consumed,
96
267537
3367
04:30
it kickstarts a domino effect in the brain that sparks a rewarding feeling.
97
270928
4337
04:35
Too much, too often, and things can go into overdrive.
98
275289
3407
04:38
So, yes, overconsumption of sugar can have addictive effects on the brain,
99
278720
4231
04:42
but a wedge of cake once in a while won't hurt you.
100
282975
3203
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7