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Home > Health Information > E-Newsletters > Mind & Body 

False Memories May Work as Diet Aid 

Raising the prospect of weight loss through mind control, researchers report they may have successfully planted false memories about bad food experiences into the minds of ordinary people, according to a report in the journal Social Cognition.

Picture of a woman smilingOnly about a third of those tested showed any indication of actually falling for the ruse, and there is no evidence that the new memories will make anyone actually alter what they eat.

Even so, the findings raise plenty of interesting questions, says study co-author and memory specialist Dr. Elizabeth Loftus, a professor of psychology at the University of California at Irvine.

"If this would work for fattening foods, we may be on the brink of a new approach to dieting," she says.

Power of Food-Related Suggestion

In the study, Dr. Loftus and her colleagues tested the power of food-related suggestion.

In one experiment in the study, the researchers asked 180 undergraduates about their food preferences. Each student ranked 62 different foods on a scale of one to five.

Later, the students returned to view a "profile," supposedly produced by a computer, of their food preferences as children. Half were told they had gotten sick from dill pickles as kids, and the other half were told hard-boiled eggs did the same thing.

Then, the students took several more tests that, among other things, asked about their early food experiences and which foods they would eat at a barbecue.

After analyzing the new round of test and survey results, researchers found that 25 percent of the students in the pickle group appeared to think - thanks to the planted memories - that they had indeed gotten sick from the food as children. The number was 31 percent among students told they got sick from hard-boiled eggs.

The planted memories also affected the willingness of the susceptible subjects to eat the food at a barbecue or even eat a related food (such as egg salad).

Most of the subjects did not fall for the fake memories, but previous research suggests those susceptible to implanted memories may share traits in common, Dr. Loftus notes.

"If you're somebody who tends to have lapses in memory and attention, you might be more susceptible," she explains. People who are adept at visual imagery may be more prone to suggestion, too.

The next step is to figure out whether implanted memories would actually change behavior and make people eat differently, Dr. Loftus says. "We'd like to continue the experiment on and get some handle on how long the suggestion will last."

Potato Chips May Resist

The power of suggestion might not work for every food, however. A previous study found that people could not be convinced to avoid potato chips, perhaps because they had plenty of experience with the food, Dr. Loftus explains.

Jeannie Moloo, a spokeswoman for the American Dietetic Association, says the findings are intriguing, especially considering the long-lasting effects of memories about food.

"If you grow up in an environment where foods are talked about negatively, or you've experienced getting sick with a particular food, that can carry into adulthood," she says. "The concern is if it leads to the exclusion of an entire food group in the diet. That potentially may be a problem."

Always consult your physician for more information.

Exercise Aids Mental Sharpness

A small new European study adds to the growing body of evidence that exercise can stave off mental decline in older people, according to a report in the medical journal Neurology.

The 290 participants, all men, were between the ages of 70 and 90 when the study began in 1990. They were asked about such physical activities as walking, gardening, bicycling, and sports.

Ten years later, the researchers found that the reduction in mental ability, as measured by a standardized test, was 2.6 times greater in the men who reduced their activity by an hour or more a day compared to those who maintained their activity level.

The loss of mental ability was directly related to a reduction in activity, the researchers found. The decline was 3.6 times greater in men with the lowest level of activity compared to those who were more active. No decline in mental ability was found in men who stepped up their physical activity.

The results are similar to those of a study done with younger American women, says Jennifer Weuve, a research fellow at the Harvard School of Public Health, who reported the results of that clinical trial in September.

There were some differences between the two studies, Weuve said, such as the kind of activity that was performed. The European men did more bicycling - two to three hours a week - while "for our women, the primary activity was walking," she says.

The greatest difference was in age. The US women Weuve studied were in their late 50s and early 60s, decades younger than the European men, "at an age when they were unlikely to be affected by a decline in cognition," she notes.

One possible interpretation of the European study is that a loss of mental ability led to reduced physical activity, Weuve says. But the more likely explanation is that physical activity is good for the brain as well as the body.

"The evidence certainly points that way," she says.

There are two theories, not necessarily exclusive, to explain the beneficial mental effects of exercise, Weuve says.

One is that physical activity increases the flow of blood to the brain, just as it improves circulation to the heart and the rest of the body. The other is that activity stimulates the growth of nerve cells in the hippocampus, the region of the brain involved in memory.

Whatever the explanation, "the risks of being active are fairly small," and the European study indicates that it's never too late to get benefit from physical activity, Weuve says.

Bill Thies, vice president for medical and scientific affairs at the Alzheimer's Association, says the new study "fits into a bigger body of evidence where virtually all the studies [involving exercise] point in the same direction."

Always consult your physician for more information.

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