Microbiome: Human Nutrition and Psychology

Authors

  • Souvik Tewari Assistant Professor, Department of Food and Nutrition, Swami Vivekananda University, Barrackpore, W.B., India.
  • Lina Sarkar Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology, Swami Vivekananda University, Barrackpore, W.B., India.
  • Prathiksa Pramanik Research scholar, Department of Food and Nutrition, Swami Vivekananda University, Barrackpore, W.B., India.
  • Papia Mukherjee Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology, Swami Vivekananda University, Barrackpore, W.B., India.
  • Anirban Pattanayak State Aided College Teacher, Department of Physiology, Mahishadal Raj College (West Bengal), India.
  • Khan Farhana Mahreen Assistant Professor, Department of Nutrition, Indian Institute of Food Science and Technology, Aurangabad, Maharashtra, India.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25215/1103.110

Keywords:

Anxiety, Brain Function, Diabetes Mellitus, Dysbiosis, Mood

Abstract

In modern World, gut microbiome is the expanding research field. Gut microbiome is the assembly of microbes these are present in gut microbiota of human intestinal cells. Human health, Psychology and gut microbiome interrelationship is very much integrated. Psychology and human nutrition are becoming a rapidly increasing medical burden. Gut microbiota is an important section of the gut-brain network, and it meet up with the brain through the microbiota–gut–brain axis. Psychology of gut brain will bring great advancement in psychology. Gut microbiota composition is altered according to age along with dietary diversification. Gut microbiota plays favourable function in the human health, host’s mind and behaviour. Mood and emotion are concerned by the gut microbiota. This review article provides some information about the relationship between gut microbiome, human nutrition and psychology.

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Published

2022-11-05

How to Cite

Souvik Tewari, Lina Sarkar, Prathiksa Pramanik, Papia Mukherjee, Anirban Pattanayak, & Khan Farhana Mahreen. (2022). Microbiome: Human Nutrition and Psychology. International Journal of Indian Psychȯlogy, 11(3). https://doi.org/10.25215/1103.110