Habituation as an underlying mechanism for Sensory Specific Satiety: An assessment using flavor consumption and preference in rats
Metadatos
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Elsevier
Materia
Sensory specific satiety Habituation Rats Dishabituation Spontaneous recovery
Fecha
2021-11-20Referencia bibliográfica
Ana González, Jesús Sánchez, Isabel de Brugada, Habituation as an underlying mechanism for Sensory Specific Satiety: An assessment using flavor consumption and preference in rats, Appetite, Volume 169, 2022, 105821, ISSN 0195-6663, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2021.105821]
Patrocinador
Ministerio de Ciencia Innovaci´on y Universidades, Spain [MICIU/FEDER, EU, Spain) PGC2018- 095965-B-I00; FPU16/01767; Universidad de Granada / CBUAResumen
Sensory specific satiety refers to a decline in the hedonic value of the sensory properties of a particular food as it
is consumed. This phenomenon is characterized by a decrement in responding as a consequence of repeated
exposure, is stimulus specific, and recovers after time. All these characteristics are shared with the habituation
phenomenon and for this reason, habituation has been proposed as the underlying mechanism that explains this
eating regulatory system. However, several studies conducted with human models have yielded mixed results.
Using rats as experimental subjects, the present study tested the following three characteristics of habituation
within a Sensory Specific Satiety (SSS) framework: spontaneous recovery, dishabituation and the distractor effect.
Experiment 1 demonstrated the basic effect of SSS and its spontaneous recovery over time. In Experiment 2
we found that the presentation of a dishabituator after a pre-feeding procedure had no impact on the SSS effect.
Finally, in Experiment 3 the presence of a distractor during a pre-feeding procedure did not alter the expression
of SSS. These results challenge the idea that SSS constitutes a typical case of habituation, at least with the
procedure used here.