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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,440 --> 00:00:03,690 (dramatic piano music) 2 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 3 00:00:07,630 --> 00:00:09,580 - [Narrator] It's impossible to escape. 4 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 5 00:00:10,960 --> 00:00:13,400 Sweet and fatty foods surround us. 6 00:00:13,400 --> 00:00:14,503 They're everywhere. 7 00:00:17,088 --> 00:00:18,970 And for decades, 8 00:00:18,970 --> 00:00:22,603 the body has not been handling these new eating habits well. 9 00:00:25,920 --> 00:00:27,333 But what about the brain? 10 00:00:28,490 --> 00:00:30,900 Do our mental health, our moods, 11 00:00:30,900 --> 00:00:32,619 and our brain abilities suffer 12 00:00:32,619 --> 00:00:33,853 when we eat badly? 13 00:00:36,940 --> 00:00:39,230 - We know that junk food is making us fat 14 00:00:39,230 --> 00:00:40,610 but science is telling us now 15 00:00:40,610 --> 00:00:43,940 that it might also be shrinking our brains. 16 00:00:43,940 --> 00:00:45,200 - [Narrator] Mind your manners 17 00:00:45,200 --> 00:00:48,053 because scientists are at the dining table. 18 00:00:50,040 --> 00:00:52,210 - Diets that are high in fat and sugar 19 00:00:52,210 --> 00:00:55,070 in the long term lead to changes in part of the brain 20 00:00:55,070 --> 00:00:56,263 involved in memory. 21 00:00:57,380 --> 00:00:59,810 - [Narrator] This is a recent field of research, 22 00:00:59,810 --> 00:01:00,900 a developing science 23 00:01:00,900 --> 00:01:03,573 that spotlights a new facet of nutrition. 24 00:01:05,553 --> 00:01:08,770 - Habitual intake of foods high in fat and sugar 25 00:01:08,770 --> 00:01:11,013 result in a reprogramming of the brain. 26 00:01:12,130 --> 00:01:13,610 - [Narrator] Your brain is affected 27 00:01:13,610 --> 00:01:15,143 by what you put on your plate. 28 00:01:21,444 --> 00:01:24,027 (gentle music) 29 00:01:29,400 --> 00:01:31,630 Everything starts with the first meals, 30 00:01:31,630 --> 00:01:32,713 even before birth. 31 00:01:37,606 --> 00:01:40,473 The brain is built during pregnancy. 32 00:01:41,370 --> 00:01:43,660 Later on, it's functioning depends 33 00:01:43,660 --> 00:01:45,330 on how it has been nourished 34 00:01:45,330 --> 00:01:48,253 by the expectant mother's diet over nine months. 35 00:01:54,910 --> 00:01:57,530 The consequences of poor nutrition during gestation 36 00:01:57,530 --> 00:01:59,402 have been known for a long time. 37 00:02:02,990 --> 00:02:04,170 But in Australia, 38 00:02:04,170 --> 00:02:07,810 scientists today are concerned with the effects of nutrition 39 00:02:07,810 --> 00:02:09,103 on brain function. 40 00:02:13,210 --> 00:02:16,870 Felice Jacka, a professor at the University of Melbourne, 41 00:02:16,870 --> 00:02:18,450 is one of the best experts 42 00:02:18,450 --> 00:02:21,183 on the link between nutrition and the brain. 43 00:02:22,870 --> 00:02:25,290 She examined the behavior of babies 44 00:02:25,290 --> 00:02:29,393 after tracking the eating habits of 23,000 pregnant women. 45 00:02:34,329 --> 00:02:37,030 - We measured their intake of junk and processed foods. 46 00:02:37,030 --> 00:02:39,310 We measured their intake of the healthful foods, 47 00:02:39,310 --> 00:02:42,470 foods with lots of fiber and nutrients, et cetera. 48 00:02:42,470 --> 00:02:45,690 And then we looked at the emotional health 49 00:02:45,690 --> 00:02:46,970 of their children 50 00:02:46,970 --> 00:02:48,600 over the first few years of life, 51 00:02:48,600 --> 00:02:50,680 from 18 months to five years. 52 00:02:50,680 --> 00:02:54,240 Of course, taking into account things such as education, 53 00:02:54,240 --> 00:02:57,790 income, the mother's mental health, parenting practices, 54 00:02:57,790 --> 00:02:59,630 these sorts of things. 55 00:02:59,630 --> 00:03:01,120 And what we saw very clearly 56 00:03:01,120 --> 00:03:04,290 was that mothers who ate more junk and processed foods, 57 00:03:04,290 --> 00:03:06,760 so sweet drinks and salty snacks 58 00:03:06,760 --> 00:03:10,500 and cakes, biscuits, during their pregnancy, 59 00:03:10,500 --> 00:03:13,420 their children had more of these behaviors 60 00:03:13,420 --> 00:03:17,263 such as aggression and anger and tantrums. 61 00:03:18,480 --> 00:03:20,170 - [Narrator] This disquieting correlation 62 00:03:20,170 --> 00:03:21,470 suggests that the mother 63 00:03:21,470 --> 00:03:24,510 impacts the mental development of the baby, 64 00:03:24,510 --> 00:03:26,590 though the link remains to be demonstrated 65 00:03:26,590 --> 00:03:28,340 on the biological level. 66 00:03:28,340 --> 00:03:31,313 In any case, Felice Jacka is convinced. 67 00:03:34,329 --> 00:03:37,170 - So what we also saw in this large Norwegian study 68 00:03:37,170 --> 00:03:39,900 is that the children's diets seemed to be important as well. 69 00:03:39,900 --> 00:03:41,980 Independent of what mom ate, 70 00:03:41,980 --> 00:03:45,270 if children were eating too much junk and processed foods 71 00:03:45,270 --> 00:03:48,590 and/or not enough of the healthful foods, 72 00:03:48,590 --> 00:03:52,010 they had more of these anger and aggressive type behaviors 73 00:03:52,010 --> 00:03:55,413 but also sadness, anxiety, worry, nightmares. 74 00:03:56,660 --> 00:03:59,040 - [Narrator] Since then, Professor Jacka's conclusions 75 00:03:59,040 --> 00:04:00,400 have been confirmed 76 00:04:00,400 --> 00:04:03,970 by studies in Spain, the Netherlands and Canada. 77 00:04:03,970 --> 00:04:06,820 There is a link between dietary quality 78 00:04:06,820 --> 00:04:09,500 and mood problems in children. 79 00:04:09,500 --> 00:04:11,700 But what is the nature of this link? 80 00:04:11,700 --> 00:04:14,703 How does food interfere with the functioning of neurons? 81 00:04:19,329 --> 00:04:20,490 Excess fat and sugar 82 00:04:20,490 --> 00:04:23,663 are now in the sights of scientists working on the brain, 83 00:04:24,510 --> 00:04:27,340 both excesses and deficiencies. 84 00:04:27,340 --> 00:04:30,030 Junk food often lacks nutrients, 85 00:04:30,030 --> 00:04:32,930 so it leaves the body and neurons in particular 86 00:04:32,930 --> 00:04:34,373 in a deficient state. 87 00:04:41,830 --> 00:04:44,530 In this laboratory at the University of Bordeaux, 88 00:04:44,530 --> 00:04:45,780 scientists are studying 89 00:04:45,780 --> 00:04:48,320 the consequences of dietary deficiencies 90 00:04:48,320 --> 00:04:49,883 on the brain of mice. 91 00:04:50,882 --> 00:04:53,799 (mysterious music) 92 00:04:58,761 --> 00:05:02,880 This experiment is used to measure anxiety. 93 00:05:02,880 --> 00:05:04,920 The animal has a choice, 94 00:05:04,920 --> 00:05:06,800 explore the lighted area 95 00:05:06,800 --> 00:05:08,113 or hide in the shade. 96 00:05:10,600 --> 00:05:14,213 A normal mouse takes the time to examine the lighted area. 97 00:05:19,060 --> 00:05:23,460 But this mouse was deprived of omega-3 during its growth. 98 00:05:23,460 --> 00:05:26,960 Omega-3 is a good fat well known for its benefits 99 00:05:26,960 --> 00:05:29,040 to the heart and arteries. 100 00:05:29,040 --> 00:05:31,210 Instead of exploring the environment, 101 00:05:31,210 --> 00:05:34,183 the mouse takes refuge in a dark corner. 102 00:05:35,270 --> 00:05:37,563 It's stressed, anxious. 103 00:05:40,400 --> 00:05:43,150 This experiment has been reproduced many times 104 00:05:43,150 --> 00:05:44,930 on dozens of mice. 105 00:05:44,930 --> 00:05:48,000 For researchers, this strange behavior 106 00:05:48,000 --> 00:05:50,020 can be simply explained. 107 00:05:50,020 --> 00:05:52,430 Without omega-3's to build the brain, 108 00:05:52,430 --> 00:05:54,510 it does not function normally. 109 00:05:54,510 --> 00:05:58,310 That's because the gray matter is 90% fat, 110 00:05:58,310 --> 00:06:00,513 so it cannot produce itself. 111 00:06:02,580 --> 00:06:05,190 The brain is the organ after adipose tissue 112 00:06:05,190 --> 00:06:09,820 that's the richest in polyunsaturated fatty acid or omega-3. 113 00:06:09,820 --> 00:06:11,590 So omega-3 is indispensable 114 00:06:11,590 --> 00:06:13,360 because the body cannot make it. 115 00:06:13,360 --> 00:06:15,000 We have to ingest it. 116 00:06:15,000 --> 00:06:16,450 It has to come from the diet. 117 00:06:18,633 --> 00:06:23,590 Oily fish, organ meat, vegetable oils and seeds and nuts 118 00:06:23,590 --> 00:06:26,370 like almonds have long been main sources 119 00:06:26,370 --> 00:06:28,250 of omega-3 for humans. 120 00:06:28,250 --> 00:06:29,860 But these foods have become scarce 121 00:06:29,860 --> 00:06:32,373 in the cuisine of industrialized countries. 122 00:06:39,372 --> 00:06:40,909 Sophie Laye wanted to go further 123 00:06:40,909 --> 00:06:43,280 and understand what is wrong in the brain 124 00:06:43,280 --> 00:06:45,000 of these anxious mice 125 00:06:45,000 --> 00:06:46,923 that were deprived of omega-3. 126 00:06:47,870 --> 00:06:50,870 She examined their neurons very closely 127 00:06:50,870 --> 00:06:54,543 and under the microscope anomalies clearly appear. 128 00:06:57,109 --> 00:06:58,000 - [Translator] Here the neurons 129 00:06:58,000 --> 00:07:00,460 bloom with all these extensions. 130 00:07:00,460 --> 00:07:02,920 But there's a reduction of the extensions 131 00:07:02,920 --> 00:07:06,110 when there's a dietary deficiency of omega-3. 132 00:07:06,110 --> 00:07:07,840 At a more precise level, 133 00:07:07,840 --> 00:07:09,980 we see the connection between the neurons 134 00:07:09,980 --> 00:07:13,337 which is represented by these small protuberances. 135 00:07:13,337 --> 00:07:15,920 But these synapses are also diminished. 136 00:07:15,920 --> 00:07:18,640 This shows that there's an impact on the connectivity 137 00:07:18,640 --> 00:07:20,280 between the neurons in the brain 138 00:07:20,280 --> 00:07:22,683 and these omega-3 deficient mice. 139 00:07:26,440 --> 00:07:28,150 - [Narrator] Without omega-3 available 140 00:07:28,150 --> 00:07:29,740 in the development stage, 141 00:07:29,740 --> 00:07:32,740 neurons have trouble communicating with each other 142 00:07:32,740 --> 00:07:35,393 because the structure of the cells is changed. 143 00:07:40,956 --> 00:07:43,880 - [Translator] The omega-3 that we consume 144 00:07:43,880 --> 00:07:45,110 will enter the brain 145 00:07:45,110 --> 00:07:48,020 and embed into the membranes of neurons. 146 00:07:48,020 --> 00:07:51,100 This will give flexibility to the membranes of the neurons 147 00:07:51,100 --> 00:07:53,250 and allow a better connection between them. 148 00:07:55,290 --> 00:07:57,620 - [Narrator] The amount of omega-3 that enters the brain 149 00:07:57,620 --> 00:08:00,790 is crucial for making brain cells more efficient 150 00:08:02,500 --> 00:08:04,030 because when these fatty acids 151 00:08:04,030 --> 00:08:06,470 are incorporated into the membranes, 152 00:08:06,470 --> 00:08:08,980 they improve the electrical properties. 153 00:08:08,980 --> 00:08:10,590 In omega-rich neurons, 154 00:08:10,590 --> 00:08:12,700 the signal propagates faster. 155 00:08:12,700 --> 00:08:15,040 The network is more efficient. 156 00:08:15,040 --> 00:08:16,750 To deprive the brain of omega-3 157 00:08:16,750 --> 00:08:19,763 is to take the risk that it will not function as well. 158 00:08:24,520 --> 00:08:25,640 - [Translator] The general population 159 00:08:25,640 --> 00:08:27,770 is deficient in omega-3. 160 00:08:27,770 --> 00:08:29,930 We have insufficient intake of omega-3. 161 00:08:29,930 --> 00:08:32,450 So it's important to pay attention to it, 162 00:08:32,450 --> 00:08:35,460 especially in the prenatal, developmental period. 163 00:08:35,460 --> 00:08:38,350 During this period, omega-3 embeds itself 164 00:08:38,350 --> 00:08:40,570 in massive quantities into the brain. 165 00:08:40,570 --> 00:08:44,290 Also in adolescents, when there's often a change of food, 166 00:08:44,290 --> 00:08:45,320 and during aging 167 00:08:45,320 --> 00:08:48,000 where the incorporation into the brain of omega-3 168 00:08:48,000 --> 00:08:49,520 tends to be less effective. 169 00:08:49,520 --> 00:08:51,483 So we must increase its intake. 170 00:08:55,540 --> 00:08:56,373 - [Narrator] The first rule 171 00:08:56,373 --> 00:09:00,560 for a brain to run at full speed, avoid deficiencies. 172 00:09:00,560 --> 00:09:01,780 But it is still necessary 173 00:09:01,780 --> 00:09:04,180 that the good nutrients are accessible 174 00:09:04,180 --> 00:09:06,173 and that a varied diet is available. 175 00:09:07,550 --> 00:09:08,810 What happens to neurons 176 00:09:08,810 --> 00:09:10,020 when meals are poor 177 00:09:10,020 --> 00:09:12,343 and above all, always the same? 178 00:09:15,860 --> 00:09:16,920 The great hamster, 179 00:09:16,920 --> 00:09:18,780 who has thrived for a long time 180 00:09:18,780 --> 00:09:21,690 here in the planes of the Alsace region, 181 00:09:21,690 --> 00:09:24,313 reveals his painful situation today. 182 00:09:27,419 --> 00:09:28,310 - [Translator] Since the 1960's, 183 00:09:28,310 --> 00:09:30,510 there's been a decline in the hamster population, 184 00:09:30,510 --> 00:09:32,670 which is on the verge of extinction today. 185 00:09:32,670 --> 00:09:33,900 And at the same time, 186 00:09:33,900 --> 00:09:36,290 we've noticed an increase in the agriculture area 187 00:09:36,290 --> 00:09:37,563 where corn is cultivated. 188 00:09:40,800 --> 00:09:41,860 - [Narrator] Caroline Habold 189 00:09:41,860 --> 00:09:44,230 wondered whether the collapse of the population 190 00:09:44,230 --> 00:09:46,653 was linked to the sudden glut of corn. 191 00:09:49,760 --> 00:09:52,070 So she did a laboratory experiment 192 00:09:52,070 --> 00:09:55,193 by feeding the hamster this cereal exclusively. 193 00:10:00,310 --> 00:10:01,143 - [Translator] During breeding, 194 00:10:01,143 --> 00:10:03,920 we observed behavioral disturbances in females 195 00:10:03,920 --> 00:10:07,160 which resulted in hyperaggression and hypersensitivity 196 00:10:07,160 --> 00:10:09,518 as soon as there was noise in the room. 197 00:10:09,518 --> 00:10:12,185 (comical music) 198 00:10:17,250 --> 00:10:18,970 Above all, what we did not expect 199 00:10:18,970 --> 00:10:20,840 is that these females would devour their young 200 00:10:20,840 --> 00:10:22,620 the first day after birth. 201 00:10:22,620 --> 00:10:23,940 This behavior was observed 202 00:10:23,940 --> 00:10:25,853 in more than 80% of females. 203 00:10:27,650 --> 00:10:28,770 - [Narrator] A poor diet 204 00:10:28,770 --> 00:10:30,230 is enough to throw a hamster 205 00:10:30,230 --> 00:10:32,023 into a murderous rage. 206 00:10:33,830 --> 00:10:36,693 This calls into question a simple vitamin. 207 00:10:40,018 --> 00:10:42,820 - [Translator] A vitamin B3 deficiency 208 00:10:42,820 --> 00:10:45,730 is at the origin of the abnormal behavior. 209 00:10:45,730 --> 00:10:47,900 When we supplemented them with vitamin B3 210 00:10:47,900 --> 00:10:50,150 in addition to their corn-based diet, 211 00:10:50,150 --> 00:10:53,160 they expressed quite normal behaviors 212 00:10:53,160 --> 00:10:54,980 and they began to nurse their young, 213 00:10:54,980 --> 00:10:56,120 to raise them in the same way 214 00:10:56,120 --> 00:10:58,833 as the females that were fed a diversified diet. 215 00:11:03,200 --> 00:11:04,490 - [Narrator] The deadly misadventure 216 00:11:04,490 --> 00:11:06,430 of the hamster is disturbing. 217 00:11:06,430 --> 00:11:08,850 Could a deficient, unbalanced diet 218 00:11:08,850 --> 00:11:12,253 also trigger aggression and violent reactions? 219 00:11:18,248 --> 00:11:21,530 (bombs exploding) 220 00:11:21,530 --> 00:11:23,960 Archives from the last war in Holland 221 00:11:23,960 --> 00:11:26,030 provide scientists with an opportunity 222 00:11:26,030 --> 00:11:28,190 to study this question. 223 00:11:28,190 --> 00:11:30,160 At the time, food deprivation 224 00:11:30,160 --> 00:11:32,390 had a serious impact on the behavior 225 00:11:32,390 --> 00:11:34,033 of an entire generation. 226 00:11:35,880 --> 00:11:37,610 - [Translator] During the second world war, 227 00:11:37,610 --> 00:11:39,510 there was a famine in the Netherlands. 228 00:11:40,760 --> 00:11:43,604 Women who were pregnant suffered from hunger. 229 00:11:43,604 --> 00:11:45,260 The children of these women 230 00:11:45,260 --> 00:11:47,040 showed greater sociability problems 231 00:11:47,040 --> 00:11:50,180 around 18 to 19 years later. 232 00:11:50,180 --> 00:11:51,530 They had more of these issues 233 00:11:51,530 --> 00:11:54,923 than other people at the same age born in another era. 234 00:11:58,800 --> 00:12:01,140 - [Narrator] Impulsiveness, aggressive actions, 235 00:12:01,140 --> 00:12:03,600 and recurrent violations of the law, 236 00:12:03,600 --> 00:12:06,580 this generation has been particularly scarred. 237 00:12:06,580 --> 00:12:09,470 Since then, many studies have linked violence 238 00:12:09,470 --> 00:12:11,093 to the quality of daily food. 239 00:12:19,900 --> 00:12:22,310 Ap Zaalberg is a doctor of psychology 240 00:12:22,310 --> 00:12:23,960 and a political advisor 241 00:12:23,960 --> 00:12:25,650 at the Ministry of Justice. 242 00:12:25,650 --> 00:12:28,820 His specialty, nutrition and crime. 243 00:12:28,820 --> 00:12:31,650 He is convinced that enriching the food with vitamins, 244 00:12:31,650 --> 00:12:33,630 fatty acids and minerals 245 00:12:33,630 --> 00:12:35,588 can reduce aggression. 246 00:12:35,588 --> 00:12:39,410 (speaking in foreign language) 247 00:12:39,410 --> 00:12:41,490 - [Narrator] It is difficult to test this hypothesis 248 00:12:41,490 --> 00:12:42,530 in real life 249 00:12:42,530 --> 00:12:44,740 because many factors and circumstances 250 00:12:44,740 --> 00:12:48,120 can influence our behavior and our impulses. 251 00:12:48,120 --> 00:12:51,180 In order to study food in almost ideal context 252 00:12:51,180 --> 00:12:53,360 without the influence of many parameters, 253 00:12:53,360 --> 00:12:55,293 he chose to go to prison. 254 00:13:00,930 --> 00:13:03,100 Ap Zaalberg then launched an experiment 255 00:13:03,100 --> 00:13:06,443 for which 221 detainees volunteered. 256 00:13:11,850 --> 00:13:13,380 - [Translator] Here, in the Netherlands, 257 00:13:13,380 --> 00:13:15,450 we conducted a study of young prisoners 258 00:13:15,450 --> 00:13:17,183 in eight different prisons. 259 00:13:19,160 --> 00:13:22,510 For three months, we gave them vitamins, minerals 260 00:13:22,510 --> 00:13:24,840 and fatty acid supplements 261 00:13:24,840 --> 00:13:28,200 and then we looked at the effect on their behavior. 262 00:13:28,200 --> 00:13:30,203 We measured it in two different ways. 263 00:13:31,670 --> 00:13:35,100 First, we asked the detainees how aggressive they were 264 00:13:35,100 --> 00:13:38,000 and we asked the supervisors for their views on the issue. 265 00:13:39,420 --> 00:13:41,450 Above all, we looked at the incident log, 266 00:13:41,450 --> 00:13:43,910 the number of times detainees were punished 267 00:13:43,910 --> 00:13:45,830 and we saw that solitary confinement 268 00:13:45,830 --> 00:13:47,383 had fallen dramatically. 269 00:13:53,350 --> 00:13:54,300 - [Narrator] In the group of inmates 270 00:13:54,300 --> 00:13:56,170 whose meals were improved, 271 00:13:56,170 --> 00:13:58,923 the number of incidents was reduced by one-third. 272 00:14:03,760 --> 00:14:06,820 Similar studies conducted in British and Australian prisons 273 00:14:06,820 --> 00:14:08,920 come to the same conclusion, 274 00:14:08,920 --> 00:14:11,430 minerals, omega-3's and vitamins 275 00:14:11,430 --> 00:14:13,330 added as dietary supplements 276 00:14:13,330 --> 00:14:15,203 reduce violent behavior. 277 00:14:25,880 --> 00:14:26,713 - [Translator] The next step 278 00:14:26,713 --> 00:14:28,890 is to test whether our scientific discoveries 279 00:14:28,890 --> 00:14:30,623 can be put into practice. 280 00:14:31,890 --> 00:14:33,070 We have several projects 281 00:14:33,070 --> 00:14:34,970 with the prison system administration. 282 00:14:36,060 --> 00:14:37,939 We will see if a change in diet 283 00:14:37,939 --> 00:14:40,423 can be considered a way to regulate aggression. 284 00:14:43,540 --> 00:14:46,280 - [Narrator] What we eat has the power to change our moods, 285 00:14:46,280 --> 00:14:48,313 to stimulate certain impulses. 286 00:14:52,896 --> 00:14:54,610 But could the food on our plate 287 00:14:54,610 --> 00:14:56,773 also influence our decisions, 288 00:14:57,950 --> 00:14:59,480 the ones we believe we make 289 00:14:59,480 --> 00:15:01,303 with the most freedom in the world? 290 00:15:05,497 --> 00:15:07,040 - [Translator] When people are asked 291 00:15:07,040 --> 00:15:09,360 if they think that the food that they eat 292 00:15:09,360 --> 00:15:13,203 has an impact on health, most answer yes. 293 00:15:16,690 --> 00:15:18,100 But when asked if diet 294 00:15:18,100 --> 00:15:21,550 can also influence thoughts and decisions, 295 00:15:21,550 --> 00:15:24,483 very few people are willing to believe this is the case. 296 00:15:29,384 --> 00:15:32,110 - [Narrator] However, in the very serious 297 00:15:32,110 --> 00:15:33,660 Institute of Psychology 298 00:15:33,660 --> 00:15:36,670 at the University of Lubeck in Germany, 299 00:15:36,670 --> 00:15:40,653 Professor So Young Park has, for the first time, proven it. 300 00:15:41,780 --> 00:15:42,940 His work reveals 301 00:15:42,940 --> 00:15:46,853 the mechanism by which food could influence our thoughts. 302 00:15:47,760 --> 00:15:50,060 And for that, the researcher has developed 303 00:15:50,060 --> 00:15:52,183 a rather original experiment. 304 00:15:54,230 --> 00:15:57,373 Imagine that you have to solve the following dilemma. 305 00:15:58,710 --> 00:15:59,700 The money on the table 306 00:15:59,700 --> 00:16:02,260 is to be divided into two sums 307 00:16:02,260 --> 00:16:05,250 but it's your playing partner, a stranger, 308 00:16:05,250 --> 00:16:07,293 who will decide on the distribution. 309 00:16:08,760 --> 00:16:11,110 - I give you two Euros and I keep eight for me. 310 00:16:13,645 --> 00:16:15,850 - [Narrator] If you accept this unfair offer, 311 00:16:15,850 --> 00:16:17,240 you leave with a little money 312 00:16:17,240 --> 00:16:19,143 but much less than him. 313 00:16:20,090 --> 00:16:22,663 If you refuse, nobody wins anything. 314 00:16:23,930 --> 00:16:25,543 So what would you do? 315 00:16:27,130 --> 00:16:29,760 Do you accept the offer and take two Euros 316 00:16:29,760 --> 00:16:31,090 even if you feel cheated 317 00:16:31,090 --> 00:16:33,800 or do you refuse and leave with empty pockets 318 00:16:33,800 --> 00:16:35,343 but keep your head held high? 319 00:16:39,020 --> 00:16:41,560 Well, it turns out that taking or not taking the money 320 00:16:41,560 --> 00:16:44,090 depends on a surprising condition, 321 00:16:44,090 --> 00:16:45,753 what you just swallowed. 322 00:16:47,298 --> 00:16:50,631 (mysterious jazz music) 323 00:17:00,480 --> 00:17:03,040 - [Translator] We have prepared breakfast. 324 00:17:03,040 --> 00:17:04,930 The only thing that is required 325 00:17:04,930 --> 00:17:07,030 is to eat everything. 326 00:17:07,030 --> 00:17:09,502 I will return later for the behavioral part. 327 00:17:10,869 --> 00:17:11,713 Enjoy your meal. 328 00:17:20,823 --> 00:17:23,730 - [Translator] As part of this study, 329 00:17:23,730 --> 00:17:25,290 we followed 24 people 330 00:17:25,290 --> 00:17:27,579 who came into the laboratory twice 331 00:17:27,579 --> 00:17:29,713 to have two different breakfasts. 332 00:17:34,010 --> 00:17:36,310 We found that the same person 333 00:17:36,310 --> 00:17:38,960 made completely different decisions 334 00:17:38,960 --> 00:17:40,973 based on what they ate in the morning. 335 00:17:47,062 --> 00:17:47,895 - [Narrator] To this subject, 336 00:17:47,895 --> 00:17:50,240 these two breakfasts look the same. 337 00:17:50,240 --> 00:17:54,230 In reality, one is far more protein-rich than the other. 338 00:17:54,230 --> 00:17:56,110 The ratio of protein to sugar 339 00:17:56,110 --> 00:17:59,280 is the only parameter that is changed. 340 00:17:59,280 --> 00:18:01,050 A few hours after the meal, 341 00:18:01,050 --> 00:18:04,223 our subject then takes several tests on a computer. 342 00:18:05,490 --> 00:18:08,500 Today, he tends to accept the offer. 343 00:18:08,500 --> 00:18:10,700 His interest outweighs his annoyance. 344 00:18:10,700 --> 00:18:13,100 He will leave with a little money in his pocket. 345 00:18:16,300 --> 00:18:19,190 Last week, he had mostly refused 346 00:18:19,190 --> 00:18:21,293 and had mostly gained nothing. 347 00:18:24,500 --> 00:18:25,530 - [Translator] The subject, 348 00:18:25,530 --> 00:18:28,980 having consumed a high protein breakfast in the morning, 349 00:18:28,980 --> 00:18:31,203 was tolerant of unfair offers. 350 00:18:36,490 --> 00:18:38,540 Conversely, the subject 351 00:18:38,540 --> 00:18:41,890 who consumed a high carbohydrate breakfast 352 00:18:41,890 --> 00:18:45,103 was less tolerant in the face of unfair offers. 353 00:18:47,160 --> 00:18:48,640 - [Narrator] On average, the subject, 354 00:18:48,640 --> 00:18:50,520 when we has had little protein, 355 00:18:50,520 --> 00:18:53,730 rejects unfair offers twice as often. 356 00:18:53,730 --> 00:18:56,333 But how to explain this surprising result? 357 00:18:57,370 --> 00:18:59,850 To understand and provide biological evidence 358 00:18:59,850 --> 00:19:01,180 for this observation, 359 00:19:01,180 --> 00:19:03,783 scientists performed blood tests. 360 00:19:04,650 --> 00:19:05,500 - [Translator] We will send the blood 361 00:19:05,500 --> 00:19:07,540 to the laboratory for analysis. 362 00:19:07,540 --> 00:19:09,110 We will measure the level of hormones 363 00:19:09,110 --> 00:19:11,330 and amino acids in the blood. 364 00:19:11,330 --> 00:19:15,330 For hormones, we are interested in insulin, cortisol, 365 00:19:15,330 --> 00:19:18,930 adrenaline and adrenocorticotropic hormone. 366 00:19:18,930 --> 00:19:22,453 And for amino acids, tryptophan and tyrosine. 367 00:19:23,428 --> 00:19:27,345 (speaking in foreign language) 368 00:19:28,830 --> 00:19:29,890 - [Narrator] On this list, 369 00:19:29,890 --> 00:19:32,430 the most important is tyrosine. 370 00:19:32,430 --> 00:19:33,500 It is an amino acid 371 00:19:33,500 --> 00:19:35,690 that is part of the composition of a protein 372 00:19:35,690 --> 00:19:38,433 that is key for brain function dopamine. 373 00:19:39,350 --> 00:19:41,950 This molecule insures communication between neurons 374 00:19:41,950 --> 00:19:44,383 involved in motivation and risk-taking. 375 00:19:49,630 --> 00:19:51,040 The results of the analysis 376 00:19:51,040 --> 00:19:52,440 show that subjects 377 00:19:52,440 --> 00:19:55,530 who have a higher level of tyrosine in the blood, 378 00:19:55,530 --> 00:19:58,803 are those who more easily accept the unfair offer. 379 00:20:01,260 --> 00:20:02,580 - [Translator] We therefore assume 380 00:20:02,580 --> 00:20:05,319 that increasing tyrosine in the blood 381 00:20:05,319 --> 00:20:08,790 increases the amount of dopamine in the brain, 382 00:20:08,790 --> 00:20:11,203 which in turn changes the behavior. 383 00:20:12,860 --> 00:20:15,130 - [Narrator] In other words, after a few hours, 384 00:20:15,130 --> 00:20:18,700 what we eat subtly alters the chemistry of the brain 385 00:20:18,700 --> 00:20:22,150 and thus, the communication between neurons, 386 00:20:22,150 --> 00:20:24,353 enough to guide some of our decisions. 387 00:20:26,580 --> 00:20:28,910 At the Institute of Psychology in Lubeck, 388 00:20:28,910 --> 00:20:32,700 experiments are continuing to confirm this result 389 00:20:32,700 --> 00:20:34,360 because it is a first 390 00:20:34,360 --> 00:20:36,363 and the implications are numerous. 391 00:20:39,233 --> 00:20:43,360 - [Translator] Since we eat three times a day every day, 392 00:20:43,360 --> 00:20:46,210 we realize that food has immense power, 393 00:20:46,210 --> 00:20:48,983 that of modifying and shaping mankind. 394 00:20:50,620 --> 00:20:54,620 So it's essential to think about how we can use food 395 00:20:54,620 --> 00:20:58,443 to promote our wellbeing and optimize our mental state. 396 00:21:02,620 --> 00:21:04,300 - [Narrator] Between dietary deficiencies 397 00:21:04,300 --> 00:21:05,690 that soften the brain, 398 00:21:05,690 --> 00:21:07,520 that disrupt moods, 399 00:21:07,520 --> 00:21:11,360 and the diet that interferes with everyday decisions, 400 00:21:11,360 --> 00:21:12,980 it's becoming increasingly clear 401 00:21:12,980 --> 00:21:16,173 that food plays a preponderant role in our psychic life. 402 00:21:22,481 --> 00:21:24,898 (sexy music) 403 00:21:28,600 --> 00:21:30,280 But what about junk food 404 00:21:30,280 --> 00:21:32,503 dripping with sugar and bad fat? 405 00:21:34,580 --> 00:21:36,773 What would happen if we ate more of it? 406 00:21:48,470 --> 00:21:51,060 This is the focus of research here in Australia 407 00:21:51,060 --> 00:21:52,923 at the University of Sydney. 408 00:21:53,776 --> 00:21:56,693 (mysterious music) 409 00:22:03,380 --> 00:22:06,410 Margaret Morris runs the only laboratory in the world 410 00:22:06,410 --> 00:22:08,423 where rats are fed junk food, 411 00:22:10,490 --> 00:22:12,620 the stuff you find in supermarkets 412 00:22:12,620 --> 00:22:15,513 and are served in cheap fast food restaurants. 413 00:22:26,020 --> 00:22:28,530 - Our experiments use a range of Western foods, 414 00:22:28,530 --> 00:22:30,400 the type eaten by all of us. 415 00:22:30,400 --> 00:22:35,400 So we feed our rats meat pies, chips, cakes and biscuits, 416 00:22:36,440 --> 00:22:39,910 the sorts of foods that are readily available and cheap. 417 00:22:39,910 --> 00:22:42,323 So we are modeling the Western world. 418 00:22:45,900 --> 00:22:47,610 - [Narrator] First consequence, 419 00:22:47,610 --> 00:22:50,550 the rat doubles his food rations. 420 00:22:50,550 --> 00:22:53,383 The animal is never satiated. 421 00:22:54,440 --> 00:22:56,953 But this is not the most surprising outcome. 422 00:23:03,840 --> 00:23:05,260 - One of our chief interests 423 00:23:05,260 --> 00:23:08,650 is the impact of this diet on the animal's memory. 424 00:23:08,650 --> 00:23:10,940 And we can measure this easily in the rat 425 00:23:10,940 --> 00:23:13,610 using a task known as the novel object 426 00:23:13,610 --> 00:23:15,453 and novel place task. 427 00:23:17,570 --> 00:23:18,440 - [Narrator] For this test, 428 00:23:18,440 --> 00:23:20,010 the researcher places objects 429 00:23:20,010 --> 00:23:21,603 in the environment of a rat. 430 00:23:23,490 --> 00:23:25,830 This one comes immediately to examine them 431 00:23:25,830 --> 00:23:28,433 because rodents are very curious by nature. 432 00:23:30,230 --> 00:23:32,430 Once the animal has completed its exploration 433 00:23:32,430 --> 00:23:34,450 and memorized its environment, 434 00:23:34,450 --> 00:23:36,503 it is temporarily set aside. 435 00:23:39,890 --> 00:23:42,780 - We then place the animal in the arena 436 00:23:42,780 --> 00:23:44,953 with one object that's been shifted. 437 00:23:45,992 --> 00:23:48,909 (mysterious music) 438 00:23:54,000 --> 00:23:55,000 - [Narrator] When he returns, 439 00:23:55,000 --> 00:23:57,800 the rat spends more time examining the object 440 00:23:57,800 --> 00:23:59,520 that has changed places 441 00:23:59,520 --> 00:24:02,490 because the rat already knows the other objects. 442 00:24:02,490 --> 00:24:04,203 They are engraved in his memory. 443 00:24:08,030 --> 00:24:12,233 The rat's supercharged on bad foods behave differently. 444 00:24:15,810 --> 00:24:16,800 - What we observed 445 00:24:16,800 --> 00:24:19,150 is the animals eating a high fat diet 446 00:24:19,150 --> 00:24:20,610 or a high sugar diet 447 00:24:20,610 --> 00:24:24,180 or the combined high fat, high sugar foods, 448 00:24:24,180 --> 00:24:27,630 were less able to recognize, to remember, 449 00:24:27,630 --> 00:24:29,610 that that object had moved. 450 00:24:29,610 --> 00:24:32,570 They explored the two objects about the same. 451 00:24:32,570 --> 00:24:36,053 That shows an impairment of their spatial memory. 452 00:24:39,258 --> 00:24:41,540 - [Narrator] Not only do supercharged rats 453 00:24:41,540 --> 00:24:43,530 have damaged spatial memory 454 00:24:43,530 --> 00:24:45,510 but also other malfunctions 455 00:24:45,510 --> 00:24:48,083 that are warning signals for scientists. 456 00:24:51,840 --> 00:24:53,853 This tampers with the hippocampus, 457 00:24:54,690 --> 00:24:57,423 a small region nestled in the heart of the brain, 458 00:24:58,370 --> 00:24:59,920 essential for learning 459 00:24:59,920 --> 00:25:01,963 and the consolidation of memories. 460 00:25:04,680 --> 00:25:06,470 The latest studies show that in humans, 461 00:25:06,470 --> 00:25:08,270 a diet that is too rich 462 00:25:08,270 --> 00:25:10,120 also interferes with the hippocampus. 463 00:25:18,330 --> 00:25:21,820 - We see, for example, that the quality of people's diets 464 00:25:21,820 --> 00:25:24,600 is related to the size of their hippocampus, 465 00:25:24,600 --> 00:25:27,540 to the size of their gray and white matter volume, 466 00:25:27,540 --> 00:25:29,890 and there's starting to be intervention studies. 467 00:25:29,890 --> 00:25:33,270 So for example, we see that only four days 468 00:25:33,270 --> 00:25:34,730 on junk food type diet 469 00:25:34,730 --> 00:25:37,890 will have an impact on cognitive functions 470 00:25:37,890 --> 00:25:40,010 that are related to the hippocampus. 471 00:25:40,010 --> 00:25:40,870 - You order a coke? 472 00:25:40,870 --> 00:25:41,930 - It tastes good. 473 00:25:41,930 --> 00:25:43,380 - You didn't care if it was a Coke, you just-- 474 00:25:43,380 --> 00:25:45,720 - No, I wanted a Coke. 475 00:25:45,720 --> 00:25:47,047 I like the taste. 476 00:25:47,047 --> 00:25:48,280 - Ooh! 477 00:25:48,280 --> 00:25:49,930 - Can I get some fries with that? 478 00:25:52,392 --> 00:25:54,320 - [Narrator] Is our memory, 479 00:25:54,320 --> 00:25:56,290 and even our intellectual abilities 480 00:25:56,290 --> 00:25:59,203 really threatened by this new way of eating? 481 00:26:00,530 --> 00:26:03,183 It is still too early to be definitive about that. 482 00:26:05,840 --> 00:26:09,363 But clues are piling up and worry scientists. 483 00:26:11,520 --> 00:26:13,560 Margaret Morris now seeks to understand 484 00:26:13,560 --> 00:26:15,600 how sugary and fatty foods 485 00:26:15,600 --> 00:26:17,110 disrupt the brains of rats 486 00:26:17,110 --> 00:26:20,283 to the point of affecting their effectiveness. 487 00:26:24,490 --> 00:26:26,543 A hypothesis is in progress. 488 00:26:27,820 --> 00:26:30,270 Eating too much fat and too much sugar 489 00:26:30,270 --> 00:26:32,910 triggers an inflammatory reaction 490 00:26:32,910 --> 00:26:34,853 that spreads to the neurons. 491 00:26:39,100 --> 00:26:41,420 - So in response to these foods, 492 00:26:41,420 --> 00:26:43,160 there's a general inflammatory response 493 00:26:43,160 --> 00:26:44,170 all around the body. 494 00:26:44,170 --> 00:26:46,690 This has been well described in obesity. 495 00:26:46,690 --> 00:26:50,110 But it now appears to be quite an acute response as well. 496 00:26:50,110 --> 00:26:52,940 And what we find is that inflammatory molecules, 497 00:26:52,940 --> 00:26:54,070 such as cytokines, 498 00:26:54,070 --> 00:26:56,969 are increased in response to the diet. 499 00:26:56,969 --> 00:26:59,890 (mysterious music) 500 00:26:59,890 --> 00:27:03,113 - [Narrator] An overly rich diet confuses the immune system. 501 00:27:07,160 --> 00:27:10,850 It panics and triggers an inflammatory reaction, 502 00:27:10,850 --> 00:27:12,933 especially in fatty tissues. 503 00:27:16,290 --> 00:27:18,500 Our fat masses release molecules 504 00:27:18,500 --> 00:27:21,553 that then propagate this inflammation throughout the body. 505 00:27:23,970 --> 00:27:26,070 Neurons spared by the phenomenon 506 00:27:26,070 --> 00:27:29,800 were thought to be safe behind the blood brain barrier, 507 00:27:29,800 --> 00:27:32,280 the membrane that surrounds the blood vessels 508 00:27:32,280 --> 00:27:34,173 and normally protects the brain. 509 00:27:39,010 --> 00:27:43,240 - So there's increased inflammation in the whole of the body 510 00:27:43,240 --> 00:27:46,124 and we think that this may spread to the brain. 511 00:27:46,124 --> 00:27:48,900 That's because the blood brain barrier 512 00:27:48,900 --> 00:27:50,670 which normally protects the brain 513 00:27:50,670 --> 00:27:52,880 from inflammatory molecules 514 00:27:52,880 --> 00:27:55,570 may be impaired, in fact, by the diet 515 00:27:55,570 --> 00:27:57,340 and become leaky, 516 00:27:57,340 --> 00:28:00,003 allowing traffic of molecules into the brain. 517 00:28:02,570 --> 00:28:05,500 Importantly, we've seen changes in inflammatory molecules 518 00:28:05,500 --> 00:28:08,850 within the brain of our animals in response to the diet 519 00:28:08,850 --> 00:28:11,173 and these correlate with the memory loss. 520 00:28:13,570 --> 00:28:16,530 - [Narrator] The inflammation that infiltrates the meninges, 521 00:28:16,530 --> 00:28:19,683 then trigger a particularly surprising phenomenon. 522 00:28:21,090 --> 00:28:23,700 In her laboratory, Sophie Laye 523 00:28:23,700 --> 00:28:25,980 has shown in supercharged mice 524 00:28:25,980 --> 00:28:28,600 that certain immune cells of the brain, 525 00:28:28,600 --> 00:28:30,120 the microglial cells 526 00:28:30,120 --> 00:28:32,343 begin to devour the neurons. 527 00:28:38,130 --> 00:28:39,780 - [Translator] These microglial cells 528 00:28:39,780 --> 00:28:41,500 within the brain are important 529 00:28:41,500 --> 00:28:43,200 because they can eat dead neurons. 530 00:28:44,869 --> 00:28:45,950 But when they're deregulated, 531 00:28:45,950 --> 00:28:49,140 especially in a situation of unbalanced nutrition, 532 00:28:49,140 --> 00:28:51,980 they start to eat neurons that are alive. 533 00:28:51,980 --> 00:28:55,210 Therefore, by consuming these neurons in excessive numbers, 534 00:28:55,210 --> 00:28:56,800 eventually, they will destroy 535 00:28:56,800 --> 00:29:00,580 or participate in the destruction of neural networks. 536 00:29:00,580 --> 00:29:02,510 That includes neurons that are alive 537 00:29:02,510 --> 00:29:04,010 and that should be functional. 538 00:29:07,090 --> 00:29:09,140 - [Narrator] The reaction of the microglial cells 539 00:29:09,140 --> 00:29:10,643 was filmed in vitro. 540 00:29:11,550 --> 00:29:14,550 These are the ones we see moving in these images. 541 00:29:14,550 --> 00:29:18,553 In red, appears the fragments of neurons that they ingest. 542 00:29:19,490 --> 00:29:20,630 In an obese mouse, 543 00:29:20,630 --> 00:29:23,220 the activity becomes frenetic. 544 00:29:23,220 --> 00:29:25,090 This phenomenon at the heart of neurons 545 00:29:25,090 --> 00:29:28,760 is now suspected to significantly affect the functioning 546 00:29:28,760 --> 00:29:29,883 of the brain. 547 00:29:39,479 --> 00:29:42,280 - We've been saying to people for 30 years 548 00:29:42,280 --> 00:29:43,510 don't eat these foods, 549 00:29:43,510 --> 00:29:44,730 you might have a heart attack, 550 00:29:44,730 --> 00:29:47,040 you might get cancer and diabetes. 551 00:29:47,040 --> 00:29:50,160 It hasn't worked to change people's behavior. 552 00:29:50,160 --> 00:29:52,580 We hope that if people understand 553 00:29:52,580 --> 00:29:54,440 that what they put in their mouth 554 00:29:54,440 --> 00:29:56,060 is actually really essential 555 00:29:56,060 --> 00:29:57,560 to the health of their brain 556 00:29:57,560 --> 00:29:59,100 and that of their children, 557 00:29:59,100 --> 00:30:01,690 that might have a more profound impact 558 00:30:01,690 --> 00:30:03,763 on people's dietary choices. 559 00:30:10,050 --> 00:30:11,960 - [Narrator] Awareness that certain eating habits 560 00:30:11,960 --> 00:30:14,303 are harmful to the brain is one thing. 561 00:30:15,230 --> 00:30:18,170 But how to resist temptations. 562 00:30:18,170 --> 00:30:20,960 Desires are often stronger than willpower. 563 00:30:20,960 --> 00:30:23,880 Junk food, especially sugar, which is glucose, 564 00:30:23,880 --> 00:30:27,230 constantly tempt us to make bad choices. 565 00:30:27,230 --> 00:30:29,540 The masterful manipulator, sugar, 566 00:30:29,540 --> 00:30:31,503 leads our neurons by the nose. 567 00:30:33,293 --> 00:30:35,793 (goofy music) 568 00:30:41,310 --> 00:30:45,750 Microscope, mini manipulator and ultrasensitive recorder, 569 00:30:45,750 --> 00:30:48,090 Xavier Fioramonti is at the helm 570 00:30:48,090 --> 00:30:50,110 of a machine capable of recording 571 00:30:50,110 --> 00:30:53,103 the electrical activity of a single neuron. 572 00:30:59,294 --> 00:31:00,520 The principle is simple, 573 00:31:00,520 --> 00:31:03,610 a slice of mouse brain is washed in a liquid 574 00:31:03,610 --> 00:31:04,953 that keeps it alive. 575 00:31:10,520 --> 00:31:13,490 Meticulously, the researcher approaches it 576 00:31:13,490 --> 00:31:15,060 with an electrode. 577 00:31:15,060 --> 00:31:17,513 The operation is particularly delicate. 578 00:31:20,430 --> 00:31:21,800 - [Translator] Here, I go down the pipette 579 00:31:21,800 --> 00:31:23,073 in the slice of brain. 580 00:31:24,150 --> 00:31:26,650 And now we will approach this recording pipette 581 00:31:26,650 --> 00:31:28,373 near the neuron to make contact. 582 00:31:30,680 --> 00:31:32,940 That's it, we made contact. 583 00:31:32,940 --> 00:31:34,800 And now we will be able to measure 584 00:31:34,800 --> 00:31:36,823 the electrical activity of the neuron. 585 00:31:39,414 --> 00:31:42,247 (machine beeping) 586 00:31:43,523 --> 00:31:44,770 The upward peaks that we see 587 00:31:44,770 --> 00:31:46,573 are potential areas for action. 588 00:31:48,070 --> 00:31:50,123 This is how neurons encode information. 589 00:31:51,820 --> 00:31:53,050 - [Narrator] The time that elapses 590 00:31:53,050 --> 00:31:57,233 between each peak forms the message sent by the neuron. 591 00:31:59,620 --> 00:32:00,453 - [Translator] Now, we will increase 592 00:32:00,453 --> 00:32:02,860 the glucose concentration in the both 593 00:32:02,860 --> 00:32:04,060 and we will see if this cell 594 00:32:04,060 --> 00:32:07,453 responds to this increase in concentration of glucose. 595 00:32:08,960 --> 00:32:10,410 As it can be seen here, 596 00:32:10,410 --> 00:32:12,540 this cell responds to the increase 597 00:32:12,540 --> 00:32:14,410 with more electrical activity. 598 00:32:14,410 --> 00:32:16,310 There is more potential for action 599 00:32:16,310 --> 00:32:17,740 than what could be seen here 600 00:32:17,740 --> 00:32:20,113 before the increase in glucose concentration. 601 00:32:21,610 --> 00:32:22,970 - [Narrator] Here is the signal 602 00:32:22,970 --> 00:32:24,403 of that single cell. 603 00:32:25,250 --> 00:32:28,823 In the brain, neurons are all connected to each other. 604 00:32:30,600 --> 00:32:32,300 Scientists suspect that glucose 605 00:32:32,300 --> 00:32:34,850 has the ability to modify the activity 606 00:32:34,850 --> 00:32:37,030 of entire brain areas, 607 00:32:37,030 --> 00:32:39,333 those that control emotions and pleasure. 608 00:32:45,470 --> 00:32:48,303 Is this how sugar ensures its grip on our will? 609 00:32:49,350 --> 00:32:51,783 This is for the moment, only a hypothesis. 610 00:32:52,680 --> 00:32:55,180 But today, sugar addiction is the subject 611 00:32:55,180 --> 00:32:57,543 of intense research in laboratories. 612 00:33:00,260 --> 00:33:02,680 And what appears more and more obvious 613 00:33:02,680 --> 00:33:04,400 is that the power of sugar 614 00:33:04,400 --> 00:33:06,093 is similar to that of a drug. 615 00:33:19,664 --> 00:33:21,290 Serge Ahmed was one of the first to bring proof 616 00:33:21,290 --> 00:33:23,323 with a very simple experiment. 617 00:33:26,820 --> 00:33:29,040 Step one, he raised rats 618 00:33:29,040 --> 00:33:31,653 by giving them cocaine and sugar. 619 00:33:34,650 --> 00:33:36,560 Then after weeks of this diet, 620 00:33:36,560 --> 00:33:38,893 he presented the animals with a choice. 621 00:33:42,992 --> 00:33:45,120 (speaking in foreign language) 622 00:33:45,120 --> 00:33:46,140 - [Translator] We have a situation 623 00:33:46,140 --> 00:33:47,660 in which the animal has the choice 624 00:33:47,660 --> 00:33:49,920 between a lever that is connected to a syringe 625 00:33:49,920 --> 00:33:52,170 that contains drug solution, 626 00:33:52,170 --> 00:33:53,580 and the drug in question is a hard drug 627 00:33:53,580 --> 00:33:55,400 like cocaine and heroine, 628 00:33:55,400 --> 00:33:58,260 and on the left, a lever allows him to control a syringe 629 00:33:58,260 --> 00:34:00,120 that contains a sweet drink. 630 00:34:00,120 --> 00:34:01,210 And there we see 631 00:34:01,210 --> 00:34:03,923 the animal chooses to take the sweet drink. 632 00:34:07,470 --> 00:34:09,070 - [Narrator] Rats selected the sugar water 633 00:34:09,070 --> 00:34:11,603 four times more often that the drugs. 634 00:34:15,260 --> 00:34:17,520 It's not a glucose overdose, 635 00:34:17,520 --> 00:34:19,973 but the irrepressible desire is there. 636 00:34:23,853 --> 00:34:26,090 - [Translator] So this experiment simply shows 637 00:34:26,090 --> 00:34:29,400 that sugar has more addictive potential 638 00:34:29,400 --> 00:34:31,040 than we had imagined 639 00:34:31,040 --> 00:34:33,520 and it is perhaps even stronger 640 00:34:33,520 --> 00:34:35,590 than the pull of hard drugs, 641 00:34:35,590 --> 00:34:36,989 such as cocaine and heroine. 642 00:34:38,193 --> 00:34:40,943 (dramatic music) 643 00:34:49,250 --> 00:34:52,813 Today, we live in a food environment that's a little crazy. 644 00:34:53,790 --> 00:34:55,880 We find sugar in a lot of foods, 645 00:34:55,880 --> 00:34:58,403 as we would expect, in sugary drinks. 646 00:34:59,540 --> 00:35:01,210 But we also find sugar in foods 647 00:35:01,210 --> 00:35:03,480 that are not meant to be sweet, 648 00:35:03,480 --> 00:35:06,630 such as ham or soup. 649 00:35:06,630 --> 00:35:07,950 We could cite other examples 650 00:35:07,950 --> 00:35:10,300 but it's adding sugar to these foods 651 00:35:10,300 --> 00:35:12,260 that contributes to the fact 652 00:35:12,260 --> 00:35:14,430 that we make people addicted to it 653 00:35:14,430 --> 00:35:15,630 without them knowing it. 654 00:35:16,706 --> 00:35:19,456 (dramatic music) 655 00:35:25,200 --> 00:35:28,240 - [Narrator] So are we actually addicted to candy bars 656 00:35:28,240 --> 00:35:31,053 and the sugar hidden in most supermarket products? 657 00:35:33,010 --> 00:35:34,300 Does the addictive power 658 00:35:34,300 --> 00:35:37,563 that draws in rats also trap humans? 659 00:35:39,544 --> 00:35:42,211 (ominous music) 660 00:35:45,330 --> 00:35:47,930 The influence of sweet food on the human brain 661 00:35:47,930 --> 00:35:51,363 is being studied here at the Oregon Research Institute. 662 00:35:58,000 --> 00:36:00,240 - [Eric] What this program of research has revealed 663 00:36:00,240 --> 00:36:03,570 is that habitual consumption of energy-dense food 664 00:36:03,570 --> 00:36:05,420 alters your neural circuitry 665 00:36:05,420 --> 00:36:08,763 in exactly the same way of consumption of drugs of abuse. 666 00:36:12,310 --> 00:36:13,143 - [Narrator] Eric Stiche recruited 667 00:36:13,143 --> 00:36:14,890 about 100 students, 668 00:36:14,890 --> 00:36:16,070 half of which are used 669 00:36:16,070 --> 00:36:18,000 to stuffing themselves with ice cream, 670 00:36:18,000 --> 00:36:19,903 while the others never eat it. 671 00:36:21,080 --> 00:36:23,020 They all came to his laboratory 672 00:36:23,020 --> 00:36:26,180 to sip a milkshake inside an MRI machine 673 00:36:26,180 --> 00:36:28,803 and deliver the secret of their brain activity. 674 00:36:31,660 --> 00:36:32,493 - Great Casey. 675 00:36:32,493 --> 00:36:34,080 So what we're going to do today 676 00:36:34,080 --> 00:36:36,180 is give you chocolate milkshake 677 00:36:36,180 --> 00:36:40,880 and record the brain activity in your entire brain 678 00:36:40,880 --> 00:36:44,200 as you receive and anticipate receiving chocolate milkshake 679 00:36:44,200 --> 00:36:45,820 to look at the neural basis 680 00:36:45,820 --> 00:36:48,433 of consuming energy-dense foods. 681 00:36:54,104 --> 00:36:54,937 - [Female] Doing okay there? 682 00:36:54,937 --> 00:36:55,770 - [Casey] Mmhmm. 683 00:36:55,770 --> 00:36:56,603 - [Female] All right, I'm gonna move 684 00:36:56,603 --> 00:36:57,436 to the other room again. 685 00:36:57,436 --> 00:36:58,830 - [Casey] Okay. 686 00:36:58,830 --> 00:36:59,910 - This is very simple. 687 00:36:59,910 --> 00:37:01,220 We're going to basically 688 00:37:01,220 --> 00:37:03,170 give you several tastes of chocolate milkshake 689 00:37:03,170 --> 00:37:05,260 and all you have to do is stay very still 690 00:37:05,260 --> 00:37:08,480 and after the milkshake's delivered into your mouth, 691 00:37:08,480 --> 00:37:10,520 wait five seconds and then swallow 692 00:37:10,520 --> 00:37:13,803 and we'll repeat that sequence several times. 693 00:37:16,200 --> 00:37:17,813 - [Narrator] Using a simple tube, 694 00:37:17,813 --> 00:37:21,443 the subject sips the milkshake without moving his head. 695 00:37:22,640 --> 00:37:23,940 - What we found out 696 00:37:23,940 --> 00:37:26,330 is that the people who never eat ice cream, 697 00:37:26,330 --> 00:37:28,250 you could trace the reward circuitry, 698 00:37:28,250 --> 00:37:29,780 everything lit up just beautifully 699 00:37:29,780 --> 00:37:32,780 and it activated things very strongly 700 00:37:32,780 --> 00:37:35,860 but in contrast, the people who ate ice cream every day, 701 00:37:35,860 --> 00:37:37,640 showed a very diminished response, 702 00:37:37,640 --> 00:37:39,853 there was hardly any activation whatsoever, 703 00:37:39,853 --> 00:37:42,820 illustrating that regular intake of energy-dense foods 704 00:37:42,820 --> 00:37:44,940 really reduces the pleasure you experience 705 00:37:44,940 --> 00:37:46,390 when you consume those foods. 706 00:37:48,796 --> 00:37:50,270 - [Narrator] The reward circuit is a brain region 707 00:37:50,270 --> 00:37:53,090 that controls the feeling of pleasure. 708 00:37:53,090 --> 00:37:56,330 It is particularly responsive to sugar consumption 709 00:37:56,330 --> 00:37:57,830 but eating too much 710 00:37:57,830 --> 00:38:00,470 ends up weakening its responsiveness. 711 00:38:00,470 --> 00:38:04,173 At equal doses, the pleasure sensations are reduced. 712 00:38:05,330 --> 00:38:07,840 - What's very interesting about these findings 713 00:38:07,840 --> 00:38:11,000 is that people who do cocaine or other drugs of abuse 714 00:38:11,000 --> 00:38:12,550 on a very regular basis 715 00:38:12,550 --> 00:38:13,790 show a very similar pattern 716 00:38:13,790 --> 00:38:15,530 that they have to escalate how much cocaine 717 00:38:15,530 --> 00:38:17,160 they do on a regular basis 718 00:38:17,160 --> 00:38:19,870 to experience the same hedonic pleasure 719 00:38:19,870 --> 00:38:22,260 and that's because of this decreased response 720 00:38:22,260 --> 00:38:23,560 of reward circuitry 721 00:38:23,560 --> 00:38:24,500 when you do something 722 00:38:24,500 --> 00:38:26,913 that's hedonically pleasurable too much. 723 00:38:28,130 --> 00:38:29,110 - [Narrator] In other words, 724 00:38:29,110 --> 00:38:32,363 it takes more and more to be satisfied. 725 00:38:33,980 --> 00:38:37,283 As in rats, sugar acts on our brain like a drug. 726 00:38:38,816 --> 00:38:40,740 But is its addictive power 727 00:38:40,740 --> 00:38:43,070 as powerful in humans? 728 00:38:43,070 --> 00:38:45,763 The question still divides the scientific community. 729 00:38:50,130 --> 00:38:51,930 But Eric Stiche's experiment 730 00:38:51,930 --> 00:38:54,283 reveals another more subtle, 731 00:38:54,283 --> 00:38:57,770 and maybe even more pernicious effect, 732 00:38:57,770 --> 00:39:01,020 the brain after a diet too rich in sugar, 733 00:39:01,020 --> 00:39:04,653 becomes hypersensitive to images of food. 734 00:39:08,100 --> 00:39:10,070 - The more and more you eat ice cream, 735 00:39:10,070 --> 00:39:12,890 the less and less the reward circuitry is recruited 736 00:39:12,890 --> 00:39:14,580 when you consume ice cream 737 00:39:14,580 --> 00:39:17,900 but the more your reward circuitry is activated 738 00:39:17,900 --> 00:39:20,990 when you see cues that say you might get ice cream. 739 00:39:20,990 --> 00:39:23,160 So your reward circuitry fires up 740 00:39:23,160 --> 00:39:25,320 when you see an ice cream store 741 00:39:25,320 --> 00:39:26,570 as you're driving down the street 742 00:39:26,570 --> 00:39:29,173 or you see a commercial for ice cream on the television. 743 00:39:29,173 --> 00:39:31,910 The reward circuity activities much more 744 00:39:31,910 --> 00:39:33,560 for people who eat ice cream all the time 745 00:39:33,560 --> 00:39:35,480 than it does for people who don't. 746 00:39:35,480 --> 00:39:37,920 And that prompts eating in the absence of hunger 747 00:39:37,920 --> 00:39:40,083 that drives obesity and weight gain. 748 00:39:42,850 --> 00:39:44,090 - [Narrator] The direct influence 749 00:39:44,090 --> 00:39:45,950 of food on our brain 750 00:39:45,950 --> 00:39:49,073 plays a crucial role in what we choose to eat each day. 751 00:39:52,850 --> 00:39:55,020 Feeding behavior turns out to be 752 00:39:55,020 --> 00:39:57,373 an extremely complex phenomenon. 753 00:39:59,570 --> 00:40:01,500 Public health issues push scientists 754 00:40:01,500 --> 00:40:02,840 to study all aspects 755 00:40:02,840 --> 00:40:05,523 that govern the choices we make on a daily basis. 756 00:40:12,879 --> 00:40:15,413 (crying) 757 00:40:15,413 --> 00:40:17,663 (slapping) 758 00:40:19,600 --> 00:40:21,700 What is really going on in the brain 759 00:40:21,700 --> 00:40:25,020 when choosing a dessert rather than a starter, 760 00:40:25,020 --> 00:40:27,340 fish rather than red meat? 761 00:40:27,340 --> 00:40:29,433 Who is really pulling the strings? 762 00:40:35,870 --> 00:40:37,850 Carlos Ribeiro's laboratory 763 00:40:37,850 --> 00:40:40,253 leads research on food choices. 764 00:40:43,710 --> 00:40:44,590 - What we really want 765 00:40:44,590 --> 00:40:46,330 is to find all the components, 766 00:40:46,330 --> 00:40:50,116 all the genes, the molecules, the neurons, 767 00:40:50,116 --> 00:40:51,700 which direct feeding decisions. 768 00:40:51,700 --> 00:40:53,500 And for that we have to be able 769 00:40:53,500 --> 00:40:56,833 to look at very fine and small effect. 770 00:41:01,796 --> 00:41:03,970 - [Narrator] The simplicity of this model, the fly, 771 00:41:03,970 --> 00:41:08,163 makes it possibly to explore new avenues, new hypotheses. 772 00:41:10,533 --> 00:41:14,029 To understand the feeding behavior of the fly, 773 00:41:14,029 --> 00:41:17,440 Carlos Ribeiro has just developed a machine 774 00:41:17,440 --> 00:41:19,120 that follows in detail 775 00:41:19,120 --> 00:41:20,890 the choices made by the insect 776 00:41:20,890 --> 00:41:22,190 when it goes to the table. 777 00:41:23,910 --> 00:41:25,930 - When it's touching the food, 778 00:41:25,930 --> 00:41:27,160 which is in the other electrode, 779 00:41:27,160 --> 00:41:29,210 with its tongue, the proboscis, 780 00:41:29,210 --> 00:41:31,670 then we can measure that with the sensor here 781 00:41:31,670 --> 00:41:33,310 which is the same sensor 782 00:41:33,310 --> 00:41:35,540 which you use on you iPad and your iPhone 783 00:41:35,540 --> 00:41:37,010 to detect touch on the screen. 784 00:41:37,010 --> 00:41:39,167 Just that here, we don't detect the touch on the screen 785 00:41:39,167 --> 00:41:40,740 but the touch of the food. 786 00:41:40,740 --> 00:41:44,040 And so we can really now dissect and analyze 787 00:41:44,040 --> 00:41:45,020 the choice of the fly, 788 00:41:45,020 --> 00:41:46,070 if she eats protein or sugar, 789 00:41:46,070 --> 00:41:48,660 but also when she's eating from the different foods 790 00:41:48,660 --> 00:41:50,330 how it eats, how much it eats, 791 00:41:50,330 --> 00:41:52,400 how fast it eats, how often it eats, 792 00:41:52,400 --> 00:41:55,330 and really dissect all the details of the decisions 793 00:41:55,330 --> 00:41:57,030 which are controlled by the brain. 794 00:41:58,430 --> 00:41:59,570 - [Narrator] Thanks to this technique, 795 00:41:59,570 --> 00:42:02,970 Carlos has proven that the main reason for choosing food 796 00:42:02,970 --> 00:42:06,730 is first and foremost deficiencies. 797 00:42:06,730 --> 00:42:09,460 Naturally, protein-lacking flies 798 00:42:09,460 --> 00:42:11,523 prefer protein-rich food. 799 00:42:13,120 --> 00:42:15,160 But as Ribeiro looked more closely, 800 00:42:15,160 --> 00:42:18,323 he observed that that is not always the case. 801 00:42:21,690 --> 00:42:23,840 - Sometimes actually we had some flies 802 00:42:23,840 --> 00:42:26,680 which didn't have this strong urge to eat protein. 803 00:42:26,680 --> 00:42:29,590 And then we were wondering why that was the case, right, 804 00:42:29,590 --> 00:42:31,100 and so when we looked at it, 805 00:42:31,100 --> 00:42:33,260 it turned out that the flies 806 00:42:33,260 --> 00:42:35,820 which had no craving for protein 807 00:42:35,820 --> 00:42:38,400 had gut microbes. 808 00:42:38,400 --> 00:42:40,710 And so following up on many experiments, 809 00:42:40,710 --> 00:42:44,030 we could show that there are two specific gut microbes 810 00:42:44,030 --> 00:42:45,750 which when they are in the fly, 811 00:42:45,750 --> 00:42:49,420 they suppress protein appetite 812 00:42:49,420 --> 00:42:50,880 and therefore these two microbes 813 00:42:50,880 --> 00:42:52,860 have a very important influence 814 00:42:52,860 --> 00:42:54,603 on protein cravings in flies. 815 00:42:57,600 --> 00:42:59,730 - [Narrator] Flies, when choosing their diet, 816 00:42:59,730 --> 00:43:02,923 are influenced by the bacteria in their gut. 817 00:43:05,750 --> 00:43:07,320 This unexpected discovery 818 00:43:07,320 --> 00:43:09,763 obviously raises an important question, 819 00:43:11,230 --> 00:43:14,390 does the bacteria in our own intestinal flora, 820 00:43:14,390 --> 00:43:16,640 that which scientists call microbiota, 821 00:43:16,640 --> 00:43:18,813 also work on our brains? 822 00:43:20,350 --> 00:43:23,053 Do they play a role in our food preferences? 823 00:43:28,223 --> 00:43:31,520 At Cork University in Ireland, 824 00:43:31,520 --> 00:43:34,683 John Cryan pioneers microbiota research. 825 00:43:39,080 --> 00:43:40,960 He has managed to prove that in mammals 826 00:43:40,960 --> 00:43:42,450 the bacteria of the gut 827 00:43:42,450 --> 00:43:44,693 intervene in certain behaviors. 828 00:43:49,020 --> 00:43:54,020 - When you take microbes from highly anxious mice, 829 00:43:54,170 --> 00:43:57,940 and transplant them to normal anxious mice, 830 00:43:57,940 --> 00:44:02,620 they become much more anxious and vice versa, 831 00:44:02,620 --> 00:44:05,510 that even when you take them from normal, 832 00:44:05,510 --> 00:44:09,073 you can normalize the stress response and the anxiety. 833 00:44:11,693 --> 00:44:14,150 - [Narrator] Scientists are even beginning to understand 834 00:44:14,150 --> 00:44:16,913 how these bacteria interact with neurons. 835 00:44:18,924 --> 00:44:20,007 - Here we go. 836 00:44:23,598 --> 00:44:26,820 Okay, so we take out the organs. 837 00:44:26,820 --> 00:44:29,170 This uncovers the Vagus nerve. 838 00:44:29,170 --> 00:44:30,460 See here in yellow, 839 00:44:30,460 --> 00:44:33,298 this is the long wandering nerve 840 00:44:33,298 --> 00:44:37,400 that communicates with all of the organs, 841 00:44:37,400 --> 00:44:40,020 all the way down into our intestine. 842 00:44:40,020 --> 00:44:44,470 And this is really one of the key pathways 843 00:44:44,470 --> 00:44:48,690 for communication between our gut and our brain. 844 00:44:48,690 --> 00:44:52,380 And what we've shown some years ago 845 00:44:52,380 --> 00:44:55,690 with our colleagues in Canada in a mouse model 846 00:44:55,690 --> 00:44:59,320 that when we cut the Vagus nerve, 847 00:44:59,320 --> 00:45:00,450 all of the effects 848 00:45:00,450 --> 00:45:03,620 that we've seen with a certain microbe were gone. 849 00:45:03,620 --> 00:45:07,090 So this tells us that the Vagus 850 00:45:07,090 --> 00:45:10,920 is one of the key pathways of communicating 851 00:45:10,920 --> 00:45:15,010 from our gut all the way to our brain. 852 00:45:15,010 --> 00:45:16,340 We still need to figure out 853 00:45:16,340 --> 00:45:18,820 well what happens when it gets to the brain 854 00:45:18,820 --> 00:45:22,280 and comes to a region in deep in the brain stem 855 00:45:22,280 --> 00:45:26,410 and then from there the signals get to the key circuits 856 00:45:26,410 --> 00:45:30,917 that underpin complex behavior like food intake 857 00:45:30,917 --> 00:45:33,563 and that's something we're working on right now. 858 00:45:34,710 --> 00:45:36,160 - [Narrator] The influence of bacteria 859 00:45:36,160 --> 00:45:37,740 on our food preferences 860 00:45:37,740 --> 00:45:40,090 remains to be demonstrated. 861 00:45:40,090 --> 00:45:42,400 On the other hand, it is established 862 00:45:42,400 --> 00:45:45,330 that these preferences act on mood and anxiety. 863 00:45:45,330 --> 00:45:48,470 Scientists now even consider the microbiota 864 00:45:48,470 --> 00:45:50,780 to be a kind of intermediary, 865 00:45:50,780 --> 00:45:53,223 a link between food and our brain. 866 00:45:59,500 --> 00:46:02,390 - The main factor that influences 867 00:46:02,390 --> 00:46:04,950 the composition of these microbes 868 00:46:04,950 --> 00:46:06,960 is the food we take. 869 00:46:06,960 --> 00:46:09,640 Diet and the diversity of the diet 870 00:46:09,640 --> 00:46:11,370 is really important 871 00:46:11,370 --> 00:46:15,380 from the moment we're born until we die 872 00:46:15,380 --> 00:46:19,160 in shaping the composition of the microbes. 873 00:46:19,160 --> 00:46:22,490 And so we're beginning to realize the importance 874 00:46:22,490 --> 00:46:27,420 that what we eat has on what's in our microbes 875 00:46:27,420 --> 00:46:30,220 and how that's influencing what's going on in our brain. 876 00:46:32,500 --> 00:46:33,920 - [Narrator] One way or another, 877 00:46:33,920 --> 00:46:36,783 our wellbeing depends on our microbiota. 878 00:46:39,210 --> 00:46:40,840 A good diet for our mood 879 00:46:40,840 --> 00:46:42,990 is a diet that is suitable for bacteria 880 00:46:42,990 --> 00:46:44,793 in our intestines first. 881 00:46:46,740 --> 00:46:47,970 This has led to the idea 882 00:46:47,970 --> 00:46:50,610 of using food to pamper one's brain 883 00:46:50,610 --> 00:46:52,803 and maintain one's mental health. 884 00:46:55,628 --> 00:46:58,590 And for this, it is the famous Mediterranean diet 885 00:46:58,590 --> 00:47:00,543 that seduces scientists. 886 00:47:02,410 --> 00:47:04,400 - The traditional Mediterranean diet 887 00:47:04,400 --> 00:47:07,930 is really high in a diverse range of plant foods. 888 00:47:07,930 --> 00:47:10,040 So lots of different leafy greens 889 00:47:10,040 --> 00:47:12,060 and different colored vegetables 890 00:47:12,060 --> 00:47:13,510 but also fruits, 891 00:47:13,510 --> 00:47:15,230 very importantly legumes, 892 00:47:15,230 --> 00:47:18,660 so this is your beans and lentils and chickpeas, 893 00:47:18,660 --> 00:47:21,870 nuts, nuts and seeds, fish 894 00:47:21,870 --> 00:47:23,070 and of course olive oil. 895 00:47:23,070 --> 00:47:25,070 Olive oil is a very important component 896 00:47:25,070 --> 00:47:27,540 of the Mediterranean diet. 897 00:47:27,540 --> 00:47:30,760 And we think that that diversity 898 00:47:30,760 --> 00:47:34,450 leads to more diversity in the gut microbiota, 899 00:47:34,450 --> 00:47:36,620 the microbiota that live in our gut. 900 00:47:36,620 --> 00:47:38,700 And that diversity in the gut 901 00:47:38,700 --> 00:47:41,493 has been linked to good health outcomes. 902 00:47:46,130 --> 00:47:48,460 We ran the first study last year 903 00:47:48,460 --> 00:47:52,150 where we recruited 67 people with major depression, 904 00:47:52,150 --> 00:47:55,120 they received dietary support with a clinical dietician. 905 00:47:55,120 --> 00:47:57,850 Now over a three month period this trial took place, 906 00:47:57,850 --> 00:47:59,040 and at the end of that 907 00:47:59,040 --> 00:48:01,200 when we measured their depression again, 908 00:48:01,200 --> 00:48:03,710 we saw that the degree of change in their diet 909 00:48:03,710 --> 00:48:06,100 correlated with the degree of change in their depression. 910 00:48:06,100 --> 00:48:09,493 So the more they moved towards a Mediterranean diet, 911 00:48:09,493 --> 00:48:11,843 the more their depression improved. 912 00:48:23,290 --> 00:48:24,210 - [Narrator] Placing the kitchen 913 00:48:24,210 --> 00:48:25,560 at the surface of your brain 914 00:48:25,560 --> 00:48:27,363 is an idea that's catching on. 915 00:48:31,996 --> 00:48:34,246 Scientists are now exploring ways to do that. 916 00:48:36,920 --> 00:48:38,560 Spices praised for centuries 917 00:48:38,560 --> 00:48:40,975 by traditional Indian medicine 918 00:48:40,975 --> 00:48:42,880 are now studied in laboratories 919 00:48:42,880 --> 00:48:45,723 for their virtues related to the mind. 920 00:48:57,660 --> 00:48:59,070 Red fruit and berries 921 00:48:59,070 --> 00:49:01,470 also have high expectations. 922 00:49:01,470 --> 00:49:03,100 The polyphenols they contain 923 00:49:03,100 --> 00:49:06,243 have the ability to reinvigorate neurons on the decline. 924 00:49:11,850 --> 00:49:13,270 - [Translator] These polyphenols, 925 00:49:13,270 --> 00:49:15,390 especially those from red fruits, 926 00:49:15,390 --> 00:49:17,360 are found to reverse the cognitive decline 927 00:49:17,360 --> 00:49:19,220 in aging mice. 928 00:49:19,220 --> 00:49:20,060 That is to say, 929 00:49:20,060 --> 00:49:21,440 these animals are protected 930 00:49:21,440 --> 00:49:23,473 with any memory problems they may have. 931 00:49:24,881 --> 00:49:26,853 And this leads us to human trials. 932 00:49:27,890 --> 00:49:28,950 In this case, 933 00:49:28,950 --> 00:49:30,950 a very recent study was conducted 934 00:49:30,950 --> 00:49:34,823 on more than 200 subjects, age 65 and over. 935 00:49:36,280 --> 00:49:38,070 In the group, some were healthy 936 00:49:38,070 --> 00:49:40,253 but facing normal decline due to age. 937 00:49:41,500 --> 00:49:42,333 To rebound their health, 938 00:49:42,333 --> 00:49:44,323 they consumed large doses of polyphenols. 939 00:49:51,760 --> 00:49:54,010 - [Narrator] Are red fruits, berries and spices, 940 00:49:54,010 --> 00:49:57,133 the miracle ingredients for eternally young neurons? 941 00:49:58,240 --> 00:50:00,143 It is still premature to proclaim it. 942 00:50:01,120 --> 00:50:02,330 Science is just beginning 943 00:50:02,330 --> 00:50:05,670 to uncover the secrets of this unexpected relationship 944 00:50:05,670 --> 00:50:07,613 between diet and the brain. 945 00:50:11,110 --> 00:50:13,420 The ideal menu for strengthening the brain 946 00:50:13,420 --> 00:50:15,633 remains largely a mystery today. 947 00:50:17,380 --> 00:50:20,900 But it seems that a diversified, balanced diet, 948 00:50:20,900 --> 00:50:23,440 low in processed food and sugar 949 00:50:23,440 --> 00:50:25,730 and favoring fruits and vegetables, 950 00:50:25,730 --> 00:50:29,023 is the best way to preserve one's mental faculties. 951 00:50:32,640 --> 00:50:37,640 - My grandmother said you are what you eat so eat well. 952 00:50:39,370 --> 00:50:40,740 And what we're realizing now 953 00:50:40,740 --> 00:50:43,680 is that science is beginning to understand 954 00:50:43,680 --> 00:50:45,070 how true she was. 955 00:50:45,070 --> 00:50:46,620 - And I think in the next few years, 956 00:50:46,620 --> 00:50:48,720 we'll start to really get to a point 957 00:50:48,720 --> 00:50:51,870 where we can understand maybe personalized nutrition, 958 00:50:51,870 --> 00:50:53,570 personalized medicine, 959 00:50:53,570 --> 00:50:56,730 and a very clear understanding of how 960 00:50:56,730 --> 00:50:58,863 food interacts with the brain. 961 00:51:00,990 --> 00:51:03,160 - [Translator] If we limited the deficiencies, 962 00:51:03,160 --> 00:51:04,563 would that reduce crime? 963 00:51:05,410 --> 00:51:06,850 Too early to say. 964 00:51:06,850 --> 00:51:10,150 What we do know is that when you bet on healthy eating, 965 00:51:10,150 --> 00:51:11,763 it has effects on behavior. 966 00:51:12,790 --> 00:51:14,870 - The more we overeat Snickers bars, 967 00:51:14,870 --> 00:51:17,650 we become hypervigilant to Snicker cues 968 00:51:17,650 --> 00:51:19,350 and then we eat a lot of Snickers. 969 00:51:19,350 --> 00:51:21,050 And we create that monster in ourselves. 970 00:51:21,050 --> 00:51:23,170 So the best thing to do if you have kids 971 00:51:23,170 --> 00:51:25,130 is feed 'em healthy foods 972 00:51:25,130 --> 00:51:28,110 and not get 'em used to eating this kind of crap. 973 00:51:28,110 --> 00:51:30,110 I can't believe I just said crap, sorry. 974 00:51:31,712 --> 00:51:34,712 (mysterious music) 70136

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