Leonard H Epstein1, Katelyn A Carr2, Alexis O'Brien2, Rocco A Paluch2, Jennifer L Temple3. 1. Department of Pediatrics, University at Buffalo Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, United States of America. Electronic address: lhenet@buffalo.edu. 2. Department of Pediatrics, University at Buffalo Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, United States of America. 3. Department of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences, University at Buffalo School of Public Health and Health Sciences, United States of America.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The rate of habituation to food and reinforcing value of food are processes that are related to food intake and body weight. Reinforcing value of food provides an index of the motivation to eat, while habituation provides an index on how repeated presentations of food relate to reduced behavioral and physiological responses to that food. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relationship between habituation phenotypes to salty, sweet and savory foods and reinforcing value of those foods. DESIGN: A sample of 229 8-12-year-old children at risk for obesity completed reinforcing value and habituation tasks for foods that varied in savory, sweet or salty tastes. Multivariate Group Based Trajectory Modeling was used to create four unique patterns of habitation to foods based on detailed 10 s epochs of responding for food over a 24 min task. Differences in reinforcing value of food were assessed for these habituation phenotypes. RESULTS: Results showed a graded relationship between the overall habituation phenotypes and reinforcing value of food, as those with the relatively flat habituation phenotype found food more reinforcing than those with phenotypes that showed rapidly decelerating responding across all taste categories. CONCLUSIONS: Those who habituated slower found food more reinforcing than those with a rapid habituation phenotype. Implications of these phenotypes for understanding how habituation relates to food intake are discussed.
BACKGROUND: The rate of habituation to food and reinforcing value of food are processes that are related to food intake and body weight. Reinforcing value of food provides an index of the motivation to eat, while habituation provides an index on how repeated presentations of food relate to reduced behavioral and physiological responses to that food. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relationship between habituation phenotypes to salty, sweet and savory foods and reinforcing value of those foods. DESIGN: A sample of 229 8-12-year-old children at risk for obesity completed reinforcing value and habituation tasks for foods that varied in savory, sweet or salty tastes. Multivariate Group Based Trajectory Modeling was used to create four unique patterns of habitation to foods based on detailed 10 s epochs of responding for food over a 24 min task. Differences in reinforcing value of food were assessed for these habituation phenotypes. RESULTS: Results showed a graded relationship between the overall habituation phenotypes and reinforcing value of food, as those with the relatively flat habituation phenotype found food more reinforcing than those with phenotypes that showed rapidly decelerating responding across all taste categories. CONCLUSIONS: Those who habituated slower found food more reinforcing than those with a rapid habituation phenotype. Implications of these phenotypes for understanding how habituation relates to food intake are discussed.
Authors: Leonard H Epstein; Suzanne M Wright; Rocco A Paluch; John Leddy; Larry W Hawk; Jodie L Jaroni; Frances G Saad; Susan Crystal-Mansour; Caryn Lerman Journal: Physiol Behav Date: 2004-05
Authors: Philip R Nader; Marion O'Brien; Renate Houts; Robert Bradley; Jay Belsky; Robert Crosnoe; Sarah Friedman; Zuguo Mei; Elizabeth J Susman Journal: Pediatrics Date: 2006-09 Impact factor: 7.124
Authors: Leonard H Epstein; Jodie L Robinson; Jennifer L Temple; James N Roemmich; Angela Marusewski; Rachel Nadbrzuch Journal: Learn Motiv Date: 2008-08