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Satiety.

ASDC journal of dentistry for children, 1984
Satiation is a sequence of physiological processes involving a variety of signals and loci which ultimately converge on the brain to bring about satiety and the termination of a meal. Signs of satiety have been inferred from their temporal relation to meal termination.
openaire   +1 more source

Satieties and cross-satieties for three diets in the rat

Physiology & Behavior, 1986
In food-deprived rats, intake of a 2 M glucose solution is independent of deprivation level. However, subsequent intake of laboratory chow does vary with deprivation, though the immediately-preceding glucose meal did not. If deprivation is severe, the rat may eat as much chow as if the prior glucose meal had not occurred.
D G, Mook   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Satiety responses in eating disorders

Journal of Psychiatric Research, 1985
Appetite and satiety responses in a test meal paradigm were studied in six anorexia nervosa patients (four had bingeing and purging behaviors) and in nine normal control women. The anorexic patients were distinguished from normal controls by the amounts of food taken and by the pattern of the hunger and fullness responses to the test meal.
W P, Owen   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Carbohydrates, fats, and satiety

The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1995
The macronutrient composition of the diet can influence hunger, satiety, food intake, body weight, and body composition. Fat, not carbohydrate, is the macronutrient associated with overeating and obesity. Fat is overeaten because it is highly palatable and because it provides a high level of energy in a given volume of food.
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Satiety: An ecological perspective

Brain Research Bulletin, 1985
The frequency and size of meals in freely feeding animals vary as a function of the economic structure of the animals' niche and their habitat. This paper reviews some of the evidence supporting this proposition. When the cost of access to a meal increases, the frequency of meals decreases and their size increases compensatorily.
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Expected satiety influences actual satiety

Appetite, 2010
Brunstrom, JM   +6 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Sensory Specific Satiety : How Specific Is The Satiety?

Journal of Advanced Studies in Health Science and Obesity
Sensory specific satiety is defined as the decrease in liking for a food after its consumption, necessitating the examination of interactions between foods and changes in liking post-consumption. Various studies indicate that sensory-specific satiety stems from the sensory properties of the consumed food and that these liking changes occur rapidly ...
Fatmanur Dilbaz, Sine Yılmaz
openaire   +1 more source

Satiety signals and obesity

Current Opinion in Gastroenterology, 2013
The obesity epidemic over the world has called to attention different ways to manage this development. As bariatric surgery today is the only manner by which rapid and sustained weight control can be achieved, new ways of treating obesity are under investigation. This review focuses on today's knowledge on satiety signaling as a means to combat obesity.
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Satiety

2010
Michael M. Morgan   +199 more
openaire   +1 more source

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