Satiety, the suppression of appetite after food consumption, involves a complex integration of cognitive, sensory and post-ingestive signals generated by the consumed product. A better understanding of how these different signals interact could allow the development of novel products optimised to produce satiety, thereby helping to counteract the effects of obesogenic lifestyles. This report highlights recent studies, conducted largely as part of the BBSRC DRINC initiative, which examined how beliefs about satiety before food ingestion and the sensory experience during ingestion together influence how the consumer responds to food. These studies highlight the integrative nature of satiety and pave the way for updated models of satiety and n...
Recent advances in the approaches used to quantify expectations of satiation and satiety have led to...
Tempting environmental food cues and metabolic signals are important factors in appetite regulation....
Previous research from the Sussex Ingestive Behaviour Group suggests that satiety beliefs generated...
When an individual consumes a food they will have both implicit and explicit expectations about the ...
For many people, food intake management is a challenging process, as food is always in abundance and...
Selective attention research has shown that when perceptual demand is high, unattended sensory infor...
Satiation and satiety are central concepts in the understanding of appetite control and both have to...
Background/Objectives: Consumption of high-energy beverages has been implicated as a risk factor for...
The most sensitive of the highly correlated ratings of appetite we introduced in the mid-1970s was u...
It is well established that the hedonic quality of the flavour of food (i.e. palatability) is an imp...
Previously, we have shown that foods differ markedly in the satiety that they are expected to confer...
Growing research suggests that a consumer's experience of satiety is influenced by information prese...
Selective attention research has shown that when perceptual demand is high, unattended sensory infor...
The sensory experience of eating is an important determinant of food intake control, often attribute...
The expected impact of a food or drink on appetite can influence decisions around eating and the act...
Recent advances in the approaches used to quantify expectations of satiation and satiety have led to...
Tempting environmental food cues and metabolic signals are important factors in appetite regulation....
Previous research from the Sussex Ingestive Behaviour Group suggests that satiety beliefs generated...
When an individual consumes a food they will have both implicit and explicit expectations about the ...
For many people, food intake management is a challenging process, as food is always in abundance and...
Selective attention research has shown that when perceptual demand is high, unattended sensory infor...
Satiation and satiety are central concepts in the understanding of appetite control and both have to...
Background/Objectives: Consumption of high-energy beverages has been implicated as a risk factor for...
The most sensitive of the highly correlated ratings of appetite we introduced in the mid-1970s was u...
It is well established that the hedonic quality of the flavour of food (i.e. palatability) is an imp...
Previously, we have shown that foods differ markedly in the satiety that they are expected to confer...
Growing research suggests that a consumer's experience of satiety is influenced by information prese...
Selective attention research has shown that when perceptual demand is high, unattended sensory infor...
The sensory experience of eating is an important determinant of food intake control, often attribute...
The expected impact of a food or drink on appetite can influence decisions around eating and the act...
Recent advances in the approaches used to quantify expectations of satiation and satiety have led to...
Tempting environmental food cues and metabolic signals are important factors in appetite regulation....
Previous research from the Sussex Ingestive Behaviour Group suggests that satiety beliefs generated...