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Amount of ingested custard dessert as affected by its color, odor, and texture
- Source :
- Physiology and Behavior 82 (2004) 2-3., Physiology and Behavior, 2-3, 82, 397-403, Physiology and Behavior, 82(2-3.), 397-403
- Publication Year :
- 2004
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2004.
-
Abstract
- The effects of nonoral sensations, such as visual texture and odor, on the size of the first bite were investigated in a series of studies using specially constructed food delivery cups with lower, from which custards were ingested ("ingested custard"), and upper, from which a custard was viewed and/or smelled ("upper custard") compartments. Ingested and upper custards were either the same or different. Bite size was defined as the weight of custard sucked out of the lower compartment during a single suck through an I I -mm diameter straw. The results from the first study indicated that the recognition of oral qualities of custards via vision or olfaction determined the size of the first bite. When this recognition was favorable, e.g., when the upper custard was known to be creamy, a relatively large bite was taken, irrespective of the custard that was actually ingested. When this recognition was unfavorable, a relatively small bite was taken. The second study showed that when recognition was prevented by modifications of the upper custard's color, odor, or visual texture, bite size was determined by the oral qualities of the ingested custard. This was confirmed in a third study, where the oral characteristics of the ingested custard were varied by adding a flavorant (benzaldehyde) and/or by using nose clips to eliminate retronasal smelling. Bite sizes decreased significantly when these variations reduced creaminess. Odor and visual texture characteristics of the upper custard significantly affected the perception of creaminess and other attributes related to the food's viscosity, melting, and thickness. (C) 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
- Subjects :
- Male
Vision
perception
Bite
Eating
Behavioral Neuroscience
Nose clips
Odor
Food science
Creaminess
Flavor
Priority journal
Oral texture
Viscosity
Ingestion
food and beverages
food-intake
Cream
Visual texture
Lower compartment
Sweetness
Human perception
Normal human
Smell
Bite size
Female
Thickness
Psychology
Human
Adult
Amount ingested
Melting point
Color
Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Physiological Sciences
Texture (music)
Sucking
Food Preferences
bites
Smelling
Humans
Nutrition
Analysis of Variance
AFSG Food Quality
obese
Appetite Regulation
First bite
Benzaldehyde
Olfaction
Food
Touch
Perception
sweetness
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00319384
- Volume :
- 82
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Physiology & Behavior
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....091db7800ad50dd295e0b51813ae74a3