“…provide only indirect evidence on the role of orosensory inputs, by manipulating diet palatability (e.g., Le Magnen, 1971;Peck, 1978), bypassing orosensory receptors (e.g., Altar & Carlisle, 1979;Snowdon, 1969), or disrupting orogastric contingencies (e.g., Blass & Hall, 1976;Davis & Levine, 1977). With the exception of a few early studies (Bellows & van Wagenen, 1939;Pfaffmann, 1952;Richter, 1956), little use has been made of the deafferentation experiment, the traditional physiological procedure for assessing the contribution of afferent mechanisms to the control of specific behaviors.…”