hunger

views updated May 18 2018

hunger can have a variety of meanings. For example, to a nutritionist it may be used to describe starvation resulting from a lack of food. However, to most of us hunger refers to the sensations we feel when we need food, such as an aching, growling stomach, weakness, or a grumpy mood. Indeed, the Oxford English Dictionary defines hunger as ‘The uneasy or painful sensation caused by want of food.’ This sensation generally motivates an individual to find and to consume food.

Let us start our consideration of hunger with how it feels. Descriptions of hunger come from written reports consisting of checklists of particular sensations, or line scales on which the degree of a sensation is marked. Open-ended verbal reports in which the experience of hunger is described freely are of interest but difficult to quantify. Sometimes the emphasis has been on where in the body an individual experiences hunger. All of these different types of assessments agree that gastric sensations, such as an aching or growling stomach, are most commonly associated with hunger. Other sensations found to occur less frequently are weakness, headaches, pain, dizziness, anxiety, loss of concentration, food craving, thoughts of food, watering of the mouth, discomfort, dry mouth, nausea, and thirst. Large individual differences are seen in both the degree to which hunger is experienced and the way it is perceived. However, in general, when hunger is reported over the entire day it is seen to follow a cyclical pattern in which it rises gradually before meals and falls rapidly as eating proceeds.

An important issue is whether reported hunger can be used to infer how much a person would eat in a given situation. Investigators have found that in some situations hunger does correlate well with food intake, but often it does not. For example, regardless of how hungry someone feels, the amount consumed in a meal can be affected by the palatability, variety, and amount of food offered. The eating environment may also influence intake, in that people often eat more when they are with a group of friends than when eating alone.

Much research has been directed at discovering the role of hunger in the regulation of food intake and food selection. Since hunger is a subjective sensation, strictly speaking it can only be studied in humans. However, experimental animals, particularly laboratory rats, are often used in studies of hunger and the regulation of food intake. Thus, hunger has been defined in ways that do not rely on reports of subjective sensations. Hunger in animals is inferred and measured by the amount eaten. So, for example, if the time since the last meal affects the amount consumed, we assume that this is because food deprivation increases hunger. The assumption in both experimental animals and humans is that, when there is a need for food, the body senses this through a variety of physiological mechanisms, including changes in blood glucose and insulin, and metabolic signals from the liver, all of which are integrated by the brain. When the brain detects that the body needs fuel, a state of hunger develops and the animal eats an amount appropriate to reduce the hunger and reverse the deficit.

While hunger may relate to the physiological signals indicating the body's need for food, learning and environmental influences can influence it as well. A newborn baby apparently experiences hunger in response to cues signalling a need for food, and cries to be fed regularly every few hours. Gradually, through learning, this behaviour changes so that it conforms to imposed meal times. That these times vary widely between cultures — for example, dinner is eaten early in the evening in Norway and late at night in Spain — illustrates the impact of learning on the cyclical pattern of hunger over the day. Studies also indicate that people learn the types and amounts of food required to satisfy their hunger.

Sometimes hunger and food intake are unrelated to the body's need for food. For example, when we are bored or nervous, we may not feel hungry but will nevertheless eat to pass the time or to calm ourselves. Such inappropriate eating can become problematic and contribute to the development of obesity. Some behaviour therapies for obesity emphasize learning to recognize hunger sensations and to eat in response to them. However, some obese individuals complain that they never experience hunger. A critical question which has not yet been clearly answered is whether some overweight individuals have impairments in physiological systems that normally signal hunger.

It is also important to determine whether low food intake, or anorexia, can be due to impaired or reduced hunger in response to physiological needs. For example, hunger may be reduced in chronically ill patients and is reported to be low in individuals with anorexia nervosa. The challenge to their carers is how to induce them to eat. They may need to stimulate ‘appetite’ rather than hunger. While hunger refers to the need to eat, appetite relates to the pleasure of eating. It is appetite that steers us to particular foods. While hunger and appetite are often experienced together, when we are hungry and want a particular food, appetites for foods can occur in the absence of hunger. Thus, we may have an appetite for chocolate or ice cream at the end of a large meal when we are no longer hungry.

Like many other bodily systems, those underlying hunger and the regulation of food intake change with age. Many elderly people do not eat enough to maintain their body weight. While the low food intake may be due in part to poor appetite associated with decreased ability to smell and taste food, there are also changes in hunger. Older individuals not only may report decreased hunger, but studies show that many do not adjust intake appropriately to changes in bodily needs.

Studies of hunger are important clinically in that they may suggest an abnormality of physiological systems related to the detection of signals from normal metabolism of ingested food. Understanding both the biological and behavioural foundations of hunger may help to suggest therapies for inappropriate food intake. For example, some pharmacological agents can reduce both hunger and food intake, which is helpful in the treatment of obesity. When food intake is inappropriately low, treatment may involve stimulating appetite, for example, by increasing the variety and palatability of the available foods, which could increase food intake even when hunger sensations are depressed.

The sensation of hunger links our bodily needs to behavioural food seeking and ingestion. In the wild, animals would be unlikely to survive if the sensation of hunger were abnormal. However, in humans, food is often abundant and culture dictates when and how much should be consumed, so the sensation of hunger has become less crucial for survival. Nevertheless, the high incidence of disorders of body weight indicates that relying on these environmental cues rather than hunger to guide food intake is not an optimal strategy.

Barbara J. Rolls

Bibliography

Bell, E. A. and and Rolls, B. J. (2001). Regulation of energy intake: Factors contributing to obesity. In: Present Knowledge in Nutrition, 8th Edition. Eds B. Bowman and R. Russell. ILSI Press, Washington, D.C., pp. 31–40.
Rolls, B. and and Barnett, R. A. (2000). The Volumetrics Weight-Control Plan: Feel Full on Fewer Calories. HarperCollins Publishers, New York.


See also eating; eating disorders; obesity.

hungry

views updated May 14 2018

hun·gry / ˈhənggrē/ • adj. (-gri·er, -gri·est) feeling or displaying the need for food: I was feeling ravenously hungry children with hungry looks on their faces. ∎  causing hunger: I always find art galleries hungry work. ∎  having a strong desire or craving: he was hungry for any kind of excitement| [in comb.] grasping, power-hungry individuals. DERIVATIVES: hun·gri·ly / -grəlē/ adv.hun·gri·ness n.

Hunger

views updated May 23 2018

Hunger

Hunger is the physiological drive to find and eat food. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), hunger is the world's major health risk. Globally, one in three people suffer from chronic hunger, which is a result of a lack of food security. Food insecurity means people do not have access at all times to nutritionally adequate food. There are three dimensions to food insecurity: a lack of (1) purchasing power (lack of money or resources), (2) accessibility (ability to get food), and (3) availability (amount of food). In the United States, hunger is caused by poverty, whereas in developing countries it is caused by poverty, war, civil unrest, or an undeveloped economy.

see also Disaster Relief Organizations; Food Insecurity; Meals On Wheels; Nutritional Deficiency.

Delores C. S. James

Internet Resources

Brundtland, Gro Harlem. "World Food Summit Plenary Address." Available from <http://www.who.int/dg>

World Health Organization. "Fifty Facts from the World Health Report 1998: Global Health Situation and Trends 19552025." Updated 2001. Available from <http://www.who.int/whr2001>

hunger

views updated May 18 2018

hun·ger / ˈhənggər/ • n. a feeling of discomfort or weakness caused by lack of food, coupled with the desire to eat: she was faint with hunger. ∎  a severe lack of food: they died from cold and hunger. ∎  a strong desire or craving: her hunger for knowledge.• v. [intr.] 1. (hunger after/for) have a strong desire or craving for: all actors hunger for such a role.2. archaic feel or suffer hunger through lack of food.

Hunger

views updated May 29 2018

342. Hunger

  1. Bangladesh suffered devastating famine in 1970s. [World Hist.: NCE, 224]
  2. Biafra secessionist state of western Africa in which, during war with Nigeria, more than 1,000,000 people died of starvation (1968). [African Hist.: NCE, 290]
  3. Erysichthon condemned by Demeter to perpetual insatiety. [Gk. Myth.: Kravitz, 93]
  4. Lazarus the beggar full of sores. [N.T.: Luke 16:1931]
  5. Potato Famine estimated 200,000 Irish died (1846). [Irish Hist.: Brewer Note-Book, 705]
  6. Tantalus punished with ceaseless hunger for food just beyond his reach. [Gk. Myth.: Hamilton, 346]
  7. Twist, Oliver asks workhouse-master for more gruel. [Br. Lit.: Oliver Twist ]

hunger

views updated Jun 08 2018

hunger hunger drives the wolf out of the wood even the fiercest animal will be driven from shelter by necessity; proverbial saying, late 15th century. A similar saying is found earlier in French.
hunger is the best sauce food which is needed will be received most readily. The saying is recorded in English from the early 16th century, but a similar thought is found in Cicero's De Finibus, ‘hunger is the spice of food.’
hunger march a march undertaken by a group of people in protest against unemployment or poverty, especially any of those by unemployed workers in Britain during the 1920s and 1930s.

Hunger

views updated May 18 2018

Hunger ★★ Sult 1966

In the late 1800s, a starving Norwegian writer, unable to sell his work, rejects charity out of pride, and retains his faith in his talent. Based on a novel “Sult” by Knut Hamsun. In Danish with English subtitles. 115m/B VHS, DVD . DK Per Oscarsson, Gunnel Lindblom; D: Henning Carlsen; W: Henning Carlsen. Cannes ‘66: Actor (Oscarsson); Natl. Soc. Film Critics ‘68: Actor (Oscarsson).

hunger

views updated May 23 2018

hunger OE. hungor, -ur = OS., OHG. hungar (Du. hōnger, G. hunger), ON. hungr :- Gmc. *χuŋʒruz (Goth. hūhrus :- *χuŋχruz); further relations are doubtful.
So hunger vb. OE. hyngr(i)an ( = OS. gihungrian, Goth. huggrjan) was superseded in ME. by hungeren, through assim. to the sb. hungry OE. hungriġ = OHG. hung(a)rag (G. hungrig).

hunger

views updated May 29 2018

hunger The desire for food that, in human experience, is generally an unpleasant, even painful sensation, which may become so intense as to make the search for food dominate thought and action. Similar sensations in other animals are inferred from observation of their behaviour.

hunger

views updated Jun 08 2018

hunger The desire for food that, in human experience, is generally an unpleasant, even painful sensation which may become so intense as to make the search for food dominate thought and action. Similar sensations in other animals are inferred from observation of their behaviour.

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