Recollections about food when hungry and sated.

Appetite

Department of Psychology, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, 2109, Australia.

Published: December 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Memory processes play a role in appetite regulation by inhibiting rewarding food-related memories when sated.
  • In three studies, participants described food cues while hungry and sated, revealing that while recollections were similar in detail and length, sated individuals reported food as more filling.
  • An increase in perceived food fillingness was linked to stomach distension, suggesting that interoceptive cues (like feeling full) might alter food-related memories, highlighting the consequences of eating when not hungry.

Article Abstract

Memory processes may have several roles in appetite regulation. Here we examine one such role, derived from the animal literature, in which satiety cues lead to the inhibition of rewarding food-related memories. We tested this idea over three studies (n's of 58, 67, 50 respectively), by presenting participants with visual or verbal food cues, and asking them to describe what these foods were like to eat. This recollection task was undertaken hungry and sated. The resulting recollections were then coded and contrasted across state. Irrespective of state, participants took the same time to make their recollections, they were of similar length and included the same amount of sensory detail and affective content. However, in all three studies, sated recollections tended to include more reports about how filling a food would be. This increase in reports of food fillingness across state, was significantly correlated with increases in reports of stomach distension across state. While these results are consistent with the operation of memory inhibition, a further possibility is considered, whereby interoceptive satiety cues are integrated into food-related recollections (but not other recollections) to form a memory-inteorception-combination, thereby drawing attention to the consequences of eating when sated.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2022.106289DOI Listing

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