Hyper-homeo static learning of anticipatory hunger in rats

S Jarvandi, David Booth, L Thibault

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

10 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Anticipatory hunger is a learnt increase in intake of food having a flavour or texture that predicts a long fast. This learning was studied in rats trained on a single food or a choice between protein-rich and carbohydrate-rich foods, presented for 1.5 h after 3 h without maintenance food at the start of the dark phase. Eight training cycles provided a pseudo-random sequence of 3 h and 10 h post-prandial fasts with a day on maintenance food between each training fast. The measure of anticipatory hunger is the difference over one 4-day cycle between the intake of test food having an odour predictive of the longer fast (TL) and intake of food with an odour cuing to the shorter fast (TS). Previous experiments showed that conditioning of preference for the odour before the shorter fast competes with learning to avoid hunger during the longer fast (anticipatory hunger), generating a cubic or quartic contrast. TL minus TS showed a strong cubic trend over 8 training cycles with both single and choice meals. There was a switch from preference for the short-fast odour at cycle 2 (TL-TS = -0.86 g) to a peak of anticipatory hunger at cycle 6 (TL-TS = 1.57 g). We conclude that anticipatory hunger is learnt when a choice is given between protein-rich and carbohydrate-rich foods as well as on a single food. In addition, since anticipatory hunger extinguishes itself, such learning improves on negative-feedback homeostasis with a feed-forward "hyper-homeostatic" mechanism. (C) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)541-547
Number of pages7
JournalPhysiology and Behavior
Volume92
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2007

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