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Knowing too much: Knowledge of energy content prevents liking change through flavour-nutrient associations. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how flavor-nutrient learning (FNL) is influenced by the nutrient content of foods and the information provided through labels.
  • Participants consumed low-energy and high-energy yoghurts over four days, with different labeling conditions.
  • Results indicated that while unlabelled high-energy yoghurt led to increased liking and intake, specific labeling (whether accurate or inaccurate) disrupted FNL and did not significantly alter participants' preferences.

Article Abstract

Associations between flavours and the consequences of ingestion can lead to changes in flavour liking depending on nutrient content, an example of flavour-nutrient learning (FNL). Expectations about the consequences of ingestion can be modified by information at the point of ingestion, such as nutritional labelling. What is unknown is the extent to which these label-based expectations modify FNL. Since nutrient information can alter expectations about how filling a product would be, we hypothesised that labels predicting higher energy (HE) content would enhance satiety and so promote more rapid flavour learning. To test this, participants consumed either a lower energy (LE: 164 kcal) or HE (330 kcal) yoghurt breakfast on four separate days, either with no product label or with labels displaying either the actual energy content (Congruent label) or inaccurate energy (Incongruent label). Participants rated liking on all four days: on Days 1 and 4, they could also consume as much as they liked, but consumed a fixed amount (300 g) on Days 2 and 3. Both liking and intake increased with exposure in the HE, and decreased in the LE, condition when unlabelled in line with FNL. In contrast, no significant changes were seen in either the Congruent or Incongruent label conditions. Contrary to predictions, these data suggest that FNL occurs when there is an absence of explicit expectations of actual nutrient content, with both accurate and inaccurate information on nutrient content disrupting learning.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17470218.2017.1373360DOI Listing

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