The month-long tournament, which broke new ground last season will take place from January 11-February 9
Mice fed during the daytime—when they normally would be sleeping—gained more weight than mice fed at night, Fred Turek of Northwestern University in Illinois and colleagues found.
They ended up weighing 7.8 percent more than night-fed mice. This held even though the mice were fed identical amounts of food and exercised the same amount, they said in the study published on Friday in the International Journal of Obesity.
“Simply modifying the time of feeding alone can greatly affect body weight,” they wrote.
“Mice fed a high-fat diet only during the ‘right’ feeding time (i.e., during the dark) weigh significantly less than mice fed only during the time when feeding is normally reduced (i.e., during the light).”
The finding might help people trying to lose weight, the researchers said.
It may be possible to simply change the timing of meals and snacks, they said. That could mean eating more in the daytime and cutting back on the late-night ice cream.
The month-long tournament, which broke new ground last season will take place from January 11-February 9
Top official raises alarm over an alleged leak of a phone conversation between a Chinese diplomat and a Filipino admiral
SAMIT Event Group's VIP Classical concert series bridges cultures through music
The 54-hole event, supported by The R&A, will be World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR) qualifiers
While green finance is accelerating economic diversification and job creation in the region and has the potential to attract foreign direct investment, the UAE’s Hydrogen Vision augurs well for a diverse energy landscape
The Israel-linked cargo ship MSC Aries was seized by Iran on April 13, with 17 Indian nationals onboard
The equity market is 'nervous' about the general election results, due on June 4, which is likely to maintain some pressure on the South Asian currency, expert says