Abstract

Two experiments examined the hedonic responses conditioned to odor cues in the phenomenon of taste-potentiated odor aversion. Experiment 1 analyzed the microstructure of licking behavior during voluntary consumption. A tasteless odor (amyl acetate) was delivered to rats either diluted in water or mixed with saccharin before being injected with LiCl. At test, subjects which had received the odor-taste compound during conditioning showed both lower odor consumption and lick cluster size, a result indicating an increased negative evaluation of the odor. Experiment 2 examined the orofacial reactions elicited by the odor as index of its hedonic impact. During conditioning, the rats were intraorally infused with either the odor alone or the odor-saccharin compound before being injected with LiCl. At test, they were infused with the odor and their orofacial responses video recorded. More aversive orofacial responses were elicited by the odor cue in rats that had compound conditioning, again a result indicating a strengthened negative hedonic reactivity compared to animals experiencing odor aversion conditioning alone. Taken together, these results indicate that taste-mediated potentiation of odor aversion conditioning impacts on the acquisition of conditioned hedonic reactions as well as consumption.

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