info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Is sensory-specific satiety for a bitter-sweet infusion modulated by context?
Fecha
2015-03Registro en:
Garcia Burgos, David; Secchiari, Florencia; Calviño, Amalia Mirta; Is sensory-specific satiety for a bitter-sweet infusion modulated by context?; Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd; Physiology And Behavior; 140; 3-2015; 180-187
0031-9384
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Garcia Burgos, David
Secchiari, Florencia
Calviño, Amalia Mirta
Resumen
The sensory-affective attributes of beverages have an important influence on a given intake and successive consumptions because of sensory-specific satiety (SSS; defined as a decrease in pleasantness ratings of a food eaten relative to uneaten foods). No studies have, however, investigated how multiple sessions of SSS for familiar drinks over a period of several days up to a week may change their pleasantness and how these hedonic-related judgments are affected by the context during SSS testing. With twenty-six participants, the present study explored the medium lasting and contextual effects of repeated SSS sessions for a bitter-sweet infusion on olfactory and flavour pleasantness over the course of three exposures in either a laboratory or a cafeteria setting. The results showed olfactory and flavour SSS for the infusion following each consumption in both the artificial and the natural setting. More interestingly, despite the failure to detect medium-term SSS (i.e., a greater decrease in pleasantness ratings of a food eaten relative to uneaten foods after repeated SSS sessions over several days as compared to the first SSS session), a contextual modulation of olfactory SSS was observed with a lesser overall magnitude in the cafeteria compared to the laboratory setting. To the best of our knowledge, the impact of eating location on the development of satiation and the differential contextual sensitivity of SSS for orthonasal odours and flavours has not been reported previously. The implications of potential environmental control of SSS are considered in this study.