Today’s Solutions: June 18, 2026

Researchers have reported the first evidence that we can “re-wire” the reward centers in the brain that encourage addictive-like behavior to unhealthy food—shifting them to respond to low-calorie, healthy food instead. This important switch in food preferences is thought to be a critical factor in achieving long-term weight loss.

Published recently in the journal Nutrition & Diabetes, scientists at Tufts University and Massachusetts General Hospital used advanced MRI technology to measure changes in blood flow in an area of the brain called the putamen, which is involved in reward and also implicated in addictive behaviors, in 13 people who participated in a long-term behavioral weight-loss intervention that they developed. Over the course of the 6-month program, all the participants lost and kept off an average of 6.3 kg (about 14 lbs).

But more importantly, the activity in their putamens also changed—where previously activity increased only in response to looking at images of high-calorie foods, after the intervention the activity shifted to favor low-calorie foods. This kind of unconscious learning, called plasticity, has never been described before in regard to weight loss, and it offers hope that more successful strategies can be developed to change not just a person’s weight but their whole attitude toward the foods they eat—and hopefully keep the pounds off for good.

(Source: Nutrition & Diabetes, 2014; 4 (9): e129 DOI: 10.1038/nutd.2014.26)

Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Europe removed a record 602 river barriers last year

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM A dam fell in Iceland last December, the first the country has ever deliberately dismantled. The structure on ...

Read More

This ultrasonic espresso method uses 75 percent less energy and tastes just a...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM So many of us participate in the same morning coffee ritual: the machine warming up, the pressure building, ...

Read More

Mexico’s tequila fish brought back from the brink of extinction

Mexico’s tiny tequila splitfin fish was once a common inhabitant in the country’s Teuchitlán river in the western part of the country. But due ...

Read More

How Bogotá is tackling air pollution by greening its poorest neighborhoods

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In Bogotá, Colombia’s bustling capital, the battle against air pollution isn’t just about cleaner skies. It’s about equity. ...

Read More