Literature DB >> 10549889

Flavor-cued modulation of intake in rats: role of familiarity and impact on 24-h intake.

Z S Warwick1, S J Synowski, V Coons, A Hendrickson.   

Abstract

Following training with distinctively flavored nutritive solutions that differ in concentration and thus in caloric value, rats demonstrate flavor-postingestive consequence learning by preferentially consuming one of the flavors in two-bottle tests (both flavors in nutrient-identical solutions.) Experiment 1 investigated whether the relative familiarity of the flavor-nutrient combinations encountered in two-bottle tests contributes to the observed preference. One of the training concentrations (rather than the customary intermediate concentration) was used to present the flavors in testing; thus, one of the flavors was in a familiar context while the other was in an unfamiliar context. The results of two independent trials (rats trained with 1 and 5% sucrose; rats trained with 5 and 40% sucrose) confirmed that two-bottle test preference was not a preference for the familiar flavor-nutrient combination. Experiment 2 examined whether caloric expectancies based upon a previously learned flavor-postingestive consequence association would affect total daily intake. On alternating days, rats consumed 30 mL of dilute (5%) and concentrated (40%) sucrose, each distinctively flavored. When given 30 mL of 22.5% sucrose containing each of the flavors on separate test days, they ate less chow and thus fewer total calories over 24 h when given the flavor previously paired with concentrated sucrose. Experiment 3 replicated the design of Experiment 2 except that fat calories were used instead of sucrose; no significant adjustment of chow intake in extinction tests was noted, even when the number of fat calories used in training was increased (Experiment 4). Thus, rats did not exhibit flavor-cued modulation of chow intake when trained with fat, in contrast to responsivity to flavor cues when trained with sucrose. This differential responding to fat versus carbohydrate calories is consistent with previous observations, in a variety of paradigms, that modulation of caloric intake is less energetically appropriate when ingested foods are high in fat relative to high-carbohydrate foods.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10549889     DOI: 10.1016/s0031-9384(99)00093-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Physiol Behav        ISSN: 0031-9384


  2 in total

1.  Microstructural analysis of conditioned and unconditioned responses to maltodextrin.

Authors:  Dominic M Dwyer
Journal:  Learn Behav       Date:  2008-05       Impact factor: 1.986

2.  Flavor-nutrient learning is less rapid with fat than with carbohydrate in rats.

Authors:  Christina Humphries Revelle; Zoe S Warwick
Journal:  Physiol Behav       Date:  2009-03-18
  2 in total

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