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- 1From:Christianity Today (Vol. 66, Issue 7)Agya Afari in Dodowa, Ghana, turns the corn and cassava dough in a pan perched on a coal pot as his middle child fans the coals. Nearby, his wife, Yaa Manu, grinds pepper, tomato, and onion to make a sauce for supper....
- 2From:Environmental Nutrition (Vol. 43, Issue 10)Do you feel like you are always hungry? It's easy to think you should be able to control, or ignore, your hunger, but that's easier said than done. Your body produces more than a dozen hormones that play roles in...
- 3From:Popular Science (Vol. 291, Issue 2)VIDEOS OF GOOEY CHEESE PULLS and photos of oozing over-easy eggs can make our tummies rumble. But these 2D dishes can't satisfy our hunger, so how can pixels still make us salivate? It's mostly because we "did not...
- 4From:Better Nutrition (Vol. 83, Issue 2)Different types of sugar affect appetite a bit differently, according to a study that compared pure glucose and table sugar (sucrose), which contains equal parts of glucose and fructose. In a group of men and women...
- 5From:Economic & Political WeeklyByline: Sourindra Mohan Ghosh, Imrana Qadeer Sourindra Mohan Ghosh (sourindra.sourin@gmail.com) and Imrana Qadeer (imranaqadeer@gmail.com) are with the Council for Social Development, New Delhi. The public...
- 6From:Environmental Nutrition (Vol. 42, Issue 3)Does food affect your mood? The fact is that we aren't disconnected at the neck, and what's good for our bodies is good for our minds--and vice versa. Research shows that what you eat--and whether you're eating...
- 7From:Environmental Nutrition (Vol. 42, Issue 4)Sleep deprivation may lead to food cravings, especially less healthy food, compared with normal sleep, research suggests. A study of 32 healthy, young, nonsmoking men of normal weight had a night of normal sleep at home...
- 8From:Newsweek (Vol. 172, Issue 16)Byline: Juliana Rose Pignataro In anticipation of the 50th anniversary of NASA astronauts landing on the moon, Newsweek is spotlighting pioneers in science and technology, highlighting their very own moonshots and...
- 9From:Women's Health (Vol. 15, Issue 9)"You're not you when you're hungry." Snickers said it first; new research says it's true. When our tummies are hollow, we're more likely to misinterpret a situation as negative, because the same cues that signal hunger...
- 10From:Science News (Vol. 185, Issue 13)A "stop eating" hormone casts a wide net in the brain. After a large meal, fat cells churn out an appetite suppressant called leptin, which hits the brain's neurons and tickles other kinds of brain cells called...
- 11From:Science News (Vol. 162, Issue 6)Sooner or later during a meal--unfortunately often later--you become satiated, and your body lets your brain know that there's no need to eat more. Scientists suspect that the body coveys this message in multiple ways,...
- 12From:The New York Times MagazineA busy brain can mean a hungry body. We often seek food after focused mental activity, like preparing for an exam or poring over spreadsheets. Researchers speculate that heavy bouts of thinking drain energy from the...
- 13From:Men's Health (Vol. 26, Issue 10)Starving yourself to lose weight never works. According to researchers at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, when mice are starved, hunger-sensing neurons break down bits of fat in their own cells to generate...
- 14From:Science News (Vol. 153, Issue 10)Masashi Yanagisawa recently went fishing with 50 different lures. The scientist landed some prize catches: two proteins whose function in the brain is apparently to stimulate feeding. Yanagisawa, a Howard Hughes Medical...
- 15From:Prevention (Vol. 69, Issue 3)? SOME CALL IT "food porn"--photos of delicious-looking dishes staring back at you from everywhere as you go about your day. Yale University researchers found that even people who said they weren't hungry had brain...
- 16From:Prevention (Vol. 70, Issue 3)Good Food How to Ease Constant Hunger BY KAREN CICERO IF YOU often find yourself hungry, increasing your intake of nutrients such as protein, fiber, and healthy fats--which slow digestion and keep you full--can...
- 17From:Science News (Vol. 188, Issue 13)
Gut microbes say when dinner's done: bacteria send signal to quell host's hunger, rodent study finds
Gut bacteria are not polite dinner guests. They fill up fast and tell their host to quit eating, too. After only 20 minutes, E. coli populations that normally live in animal guts produce proteins that can curb how... - 18From:Prevention (Vol. 65, Issue 8)Always ravenous? Now you can actually zap away your hunger. Electroacupuncture (acupuncture with an electric current), along with a reduced-calorie diet, suppressed appetite and helped overweight people burn more fat in...
- 19From:Maclean's (Vol. 111, Issue 9)In a breakthrough that could affect treatments for disorders ranging from obesity to diabetes and the emaciation resulting from cancer or AIDS, U.S. researchers say hunger appears to be triggered by two previously...
- 20From:Science News (Vol. 162, Issue 1)Does the smell of movie-theater popcorn send you dashing for a supersize bucket? Oddly enough, a study of sexual dysfunction in mutated mice may help explain such connections between smell and appetite. The mice are...