Food Odours Direct Specific Appetite

Olfactory food cues were found to increase appetite for products similar in taste. We aimed to replicate this phenomenon for taste (sweet/savoury), determine whether it extends to energy density (high/low) as well, and uncover whether this effect is modulated by hunger state. Twenty-nine healthy-wei...

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Main Authors: Harriët F. A. Zoon, Cees de Graaf, Sanne Boesveldt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-02-01
Series:Foods
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2304-8158/5/1/12
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spelling doaj-ea60bb48a890498697e6f4b0b05876eb2020-11-24T22:32:12ZengMDPI AGFoods2304-81582016-02-01511210.3390/foods5010012foods5010012Food Odours Direct Specific AppetiteHarriët F. A. Zoon0Cees de Graaf1Sanne Boesveldt2Division of Human Nutrition, Wageningen University, P.O. Box 8129, 6700 EV Wageningen, The NetherlandsDivision of Human Nutrition, Wageningen University, P.O. Box 8129, 6700 EV Wageningen, The NetherlandsDivision of Human Nutrition, Wageningen University, P.O. Box 8129, 6700 EV Wageningen, The NetherlandsOlfactory food cues were found to increase appetite for products similar in taste. We aimed to replicate this phenomenon for taste (sweet/savoury), determine whether it extends to energy density (high/low) as well, and uncover whether this effect is modulated by hunger state. Twenty-nine healthy-weight females smelled four odours differing in the energy density and taste they signalled, one non-food odour, and one odourless solution (control), in random order, for three minutes each. Appetite for 15 food products was rated in the following two minutes. Mixed model analyses revealed that exposure to an odour signalling a specific taste (respectively sweet, savoury) led to a greater appetite for congruent food products (sweet/savoury) compared to incongruent food products (savoury p < 0.001; sweet p < 0.001) or neutral food products (p = 0.02; p = 0.003). A similar pattern was present for the energy-density category (respectively high-energy dense, low-energy dense) signalled by the odours (low-energy products p < 0.001; high-energy products p = 0.008). Hunger state did not have a significant impact on sensory-specific appetite. These results suggest that exposure to food odours increases appetite for congruent products, in terms of both taste and energy density, irrespective of hunger state. We speculate that food odours steer towards intake of products with a congruent macronutrient composition.http://www.mdpi.com/2304-8158/5/1/12sensory-specific appetiteolfactiontasteenergy density
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Harriët F. A. Zoon
Cees de Graaf
Sanne Boesveldt
spellingShingle Harriët F. A. Zoon
Cees de Graaf
Sanne Boesveldt
Food Odours Direct Specific Appetite
Foods
sensory-specific appetite
olfaction
taste
energy density
author_facet Harriët F. A. Zoon
Cees de Graaf
Sanne Boesveldt
author_sort Harriët F. A. Zoon
title Food Odours Direct Specific Appetite
title_short Food Odours Direct Specific Appetite
title_full Food Odours Direct Specific Appetite
title_fullStr Food Odours Direct Specific Appetite
title_full_unstemmed Food Odours Direct Specific Appetite
title_sort food odours direct specific appetite
publisher MDPI AG
series Foods
issn 2304-8158
publishDate 2016-02-01
description Olfactory food cues were found to increase appetite for products similar in taste. We aimed to replicate this phenomenon for taste (sweet/savoury), determine whether it extends to energy density (high/low) as well, and uncover whether this effect is modulated by hunger state. Twenty-nine healthy-weight females smelled four odours differing in the energy density and taste they signalled, one non-food odour, and one odourless solution (control), in random order, for three minutes each. Appetite for 15 food products was rated in the following two minutes. Mixed model analyses revealed that exposure to an odour signalling a specific taste (respectively sweet, savoury) led to a greater appetite for congruent food products (sweet/savoury) compared to incongruent food products (savoury p < 0.001; sweet p < 0.001) or neutral food products (p = 0.02; p = 0.003). A similar pattern was present for the energy-density category (respectively high-energy dense, low-energy dense) signalled by the odours (low-energy products p < 0.001; high-energy products p = 0.008). Hunger state did not have a significant impact on sensory-specific appetite. These results suggest that exposure to food odours increases appetite for congruent products, in terms of both taste and energy density, irrespective of hunger state. We speculate that food odours steer towards intake of products with a congruent macronutrient composition.
topic sensory-specific appetite
olfaction
taste
energy density
url http://www.mdpi.com/2304-8158/5/1/12
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