Paper by Dr. Sato Published in BMC Research Notes
A paper by Dr. Wataru Sato entitled “Homeostatic states modulate unconscious hedonic responses to food ” (co-authored with Sawada, R., Kubota, T., Toichi, M., & Fushiki, T.)
was published in BMC Research Notes. The article is freely available online at the link below.
Sato, W., Sawada, R., Kubota, T., Toichi, M., & Fushiki, T. (2017).
Homeostatic modulation on unconscious hedonic responses to food.
BMC Research Notes, 10, 511.
https://bmcresnotes.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13104-017-2835-y
○Abstract
Objective
Hedonic/affective responses to food play a critical role in eating behavior. Previous behavioral studies have shown that hedonic responses to food are elicited consciously and unconsciously. Although the studies also showed that hunger and satiation have a modulatory effect on conscious hedonic responses to food, the effect of these homeostatic states on unconscious hedonic responses to food remains unknown.
Results
We investigated unconscious hedonic responses to food in hungry and satiated participants using the subliminal affective priming paradigm. Food images or corresponding mosaic images were presented in the left or right peripheral visual field during 33 ms. Then photographs of target faces with emotionally neutral expressions were presented, and the participants evaluated their preference for the faces. Additionally, daily eating behaviors were assessed using questionnaires. Preference for the target faces was increased by food images relative to the mosaics in the hungry, but not the satiated, state. The difference in preference ratings between the food and mosaic conditions was positively correlated with the tendency for external eating in the hungry, but not the satiated, group. Our findings suggest that homeostatic states modulate unconscious hedonic responses to food and that this phenomenon is related to daily eating behaviors.
○Keywords
Dutch eating behavior questionnaire (DEBQ) Food Hungry-full homeostatic states Subliminal affective priming Unconscious hedonic responses
Homeostatic modulation on unconscious hedonic responses to food.
BMC Research Notes, 10, 511.
https://bmcresnotes.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13104-017-2835-y
○Abstract
Objective
Hedonic/affective responses to food play a critical role in eating behavior. Previous behavioral studies have shown that hedonic responses to food are elicited consciously and unconsciously. Although the studies also showed that hunger and satiation have a modulatory effect on conscious hedonic responses to food, the effect of these homeostatic states on unconscious hedonic responses to food remains unknown.
Results
We investigated unconscious hedonic responses to food in hungry and satiated participants using the subliminal affective priming paradigm. Food images or corresponding mosaic images were presented in the left or right peripheral visual field during 33 ms. Then photographs of target faces with emotionally neutral expressions were presented, and the participants evaluated their preference for the faces. Additionally, daily eating behaviors were assessed using questionnaires. Preference for the target faces was increased by food images relative to the mosaics in the hungry, but not the satiated, state. The difference in preference ratings between the food and mosaic conditions was positively correlated with the tendency for external eating in the hungry, but not the satiated, group. Our findings suggest that homeostatic states modulate unconscious hedonic responses to food and that this phenomenon is related to daily eating behaviors.
○Keywords
Dutch eating behavior questionnaire (DEBQ) Food Hungry-full homeostatic states Subliminal affective priming Unconscious hedonic responses
2017/11/08