Abstract

Increasingly consumption of healthy foods is advised to improve population health. Reasons people give for choosing one food over another suggest that non-sensory features like health aspects are appreciated as of lower importance than taste. However, many food choices are made in the absence of the actual perception of a food’s sensory properties, and therefore highly rely on previous experiences of similar consumptions stored in memory. In this study we assessed the differential strength of food associations implicitly stored in memory, using an associative priming paradigm. Participants (N = 30) were exposed to a forced-choice picture-categorization task, in which the food or non-food target images were primed with either non-sensory or sensory related words. We observed a smaller N400 amplitude at the parietal electrodes when categorizing food as compared to non-food images. While this effect was enhanced by the presentation of a food-related word prime during food trials, the primes had no effect in the non-food trials. More specifically, we found that sensory associations are stronger implicitly represented in memory as compared to non-sensory associations. Thus, this study highlights the neuronal mechanisms underlying previous observations that sensory associations are important features of food memory, and therefore a primary motive in food choice.

Highlights

  • In a supermarket individuals are confronted with a lot of different food products to choose from

  • We focus on the N400 component, found to be related to associative processing, because we consider this to be the stage of information processing where implicitly activated memory traces are compared to a perceived food product

  • Regarding the electrophysiological data corresponding to this effect, we observed that event-related potentials (ERPs) to food and non-food targets preceded by a neutral prime diverged clearly between 350 and 450 ms after target onset (t Target (30) = -5.805, p < .001) (Fig 3a and 3c)

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Summary

Introduction

In a supermarket individuals are confronted with a lot of different food products to choose from. Food companies anticipate on this decision process by marketing their products by directing the attention of potential consumers towards the sensory properties of a product (i.e. taste, smell and texture), and by highlighting additional features of a food product related to specific non-sensory related characteristics of these products. Examples of the latter characteristics are the time a product most likely is consumed (e.g., breakfast drink) and the PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0154128. Brain Potentials of Implicit Food Memory analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript Examples of the latter characteristics are the time a product most likely is consumed (e.g., breakfast drink) and the PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0154128 May 23, 2016

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