1989
DOI: 10.1016/0031-9384(89)90011-5
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Flavor preferences conditioned by intragastric fat infusions in rats

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Cited by 119 publications
(65 citation statements)
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“…In this instance, consumption of one flavoured water leads to intra-gastric infusion of a nutrient solution, while consumption of the second flavoured solution leads to intra-gastric water infusion. The outcome of these studies is both clear and highly reproducible: intra-gastric infusions of fat [15,16], various sugars [17][18][19], protein [20] and alcohol [21,22] all support a profound and enduring increase in preference for the nutrientpaired flavour. In animal studies, it has been argued that the important distinction between FNL-H and FNL-S is in the way these processes moderate behaviour, with the suggestion that FNL-S results in small meals that cannot be explained by reduced preference [23].…”
mentioning
confidence: 94%
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“…In this instance, consumption of one flavoured water leads to intra-gastric infusion of a nutrient solution, while consumption of the second flavoured solution leads to intra-gastric water infusion. The outcome of these studies is both clear and highly reproducible: intra-gastric infusions of fat [15,16], various sugars [17][18][19], protein [20] and alcohol [21,22] all support a profound and enduring increase in preference for the nutrientpaired flavour. In animal studies, it has been argued that the important distinction between FNL-H and FNL-S is in the way these processes moderate behaviour, with the suggestion that FNL-S results in small meals that cannot be explained by reduced preference [23].…”
mentioning
confidence: 94%
“…In this instance, consumption of one flavoured water leads to intra-gastric infusion of a nutrient solution, while consumption of the second flavoured solution leads to intra-gastric water infusion. The outcome of these studies is both clear and highly reproducible: intra-gastric infusions of fat [15,16] reported changes consistent with FNL-S. Moreover, failures to find effects tend to be underreported as they can often be dismissed by the researchers as inadequately controlled designs, and certainly there are several studies in our laboratory and elsewhere [40] that add to the body of evidence that both types of flavour associations are elusive in humans.…”
mentioning
confidence: 95%
“…sucrose (Sclafani, 2002), glucose (Myers & Sclafani, 2001a, b), starch (Elizalde & Sclafani, 1988;Sclafani & Nissenbaum, 1988), fats (Lucas & Sclafani, 1989) and alcohol (Ackroff & Sclafani, 2001;Ackroff & Sclafani, 2002;Ackroff & Sclafani, 2003). Booth (Booth & Davis, 1973;Booth, 1977) reported that rats learned to prefer flavours paired with an energy-rich food when hungry but switched their preference to flavours associated with a low-energy food when sated.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent work in my laboratory indicates that training nondeprived rats in long (24-h/day) sessions is very effective in conditioning flavor preferences (Elizalde & Sclafani, 1990;Lucas & Sclafani, 1989;. The rats in our studies were fitted with two chronic intragastric (lG) catheters that were connected through a swivel device to two infusion pumps.…”
Section: Post-oral Condmoningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We have also conditioned flavor preferences by pairing a grape or cherry flavor with IG infusions of a corn oil emulsion (Lucas & Sclafani, 1989). The preferences conditioned by the corn oil, however, developed less readily and were weaker than those conditioned by Polycose.…”
Section: Post-oral Condmoningmentioning
confidence: 99%