Τετάρτη 1 Απριλίου 2020

Experience informs consummatory choices for congruent and incongruent odor-taste mixtures in rats

Experience informs consummatory choices for congruent and incongruent odor-taste mixtures in rats:

Abstract
Experience is an essential factor informing food choice. Eating food generates enduring odor-taste associations that link an odor with a taste’s quality and hedonic value (pleasantness/unpleasantness) and creates the perception of a congruent odor-taste combination. Previous human psychophysical experiments demonstrate that experience with odor-taste mixtures shapes perceptual judgements related to the intensity, familiarity, and pleasantness of chemosensory stimuli. However, how these perceptual judgements inform consummatory choice is less clear. Using rats as a model system and a two-bottle brief-access task, we investigated how experience with palatable and unpalatable odor-taste mixtures influences consummatory choice related to odor-taste congruence and stimulus familiarity. We found that the association between an odor and a taste, not the odor’s identity or its congruence with a taste, informs consummatory choice for odor-taste mixtures. Furthermore, we showed that the association between an odor and a taste, not odor neophobia, informs consummatory choice for odors dissolved in water. Our results provide further evidence that the association between an odor and a taste, after odor-taste mixture experience, is a fundamental feature guiding consummatory choice.


Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:

Δημοσίευση σχολίου

Αρχειοθήκη ιστολογίου