Sweet taste in the calf: III. Behavioral responses to sweeteners.

TitleSweet taste in the calf: III. Behavioral responses to sweeteners.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1994
AuthorsHellekant, G., Hård af Segerstad C., & Roberts T. W.
JournalPhysiology & behavior
Volume56
Issue3
Pagination555-62
Date Published1994 Sep
KeywordsAge Factors, Animals, cattle, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Food Preferences, Male, Sweetening Agents, Taste, Taste Threshold, 甜味剂
Abstract

The hedonic response to the sweeteners acesulfame-K, aspartame, fructose, galactose, glucose, glycine, lactose, maltose, Na-saccharine, sucrose, and xylitol was recorded in five groups of 4-16-week-old calves. The compounds were presented to the calves for 12 or 24 h in two-bottle preference tests with tap water as one choice. Glycine (10 mM and higher), sucrose (20 mM and higher), and fructose concentrations were most preferred. Sodium-saccharine was highly preferred at and above 4 mM concentration, fructose and lactose were preferred above 40 mM, galactose was preferred moderately, acesulfame-K and maltose were preferred inconsistently, and aspartame and xylitol were not preferred at any concentration. The change of preference during the tests was also studied. Three types of consumption changes were observed. 1) Increased preference of the tastant during consumption, seen during sucrose and, to lesser a extent, fructose consumption. 2) Initial high preference for the tastants, diminishing during the test period, observed with fructose, galactose, glucose, glycine, lactose, and maltose. 3) Initial large fluctuations in consumption from the two bottles, but no change in overall preference. This pattern was seen with xylitol and aspartame. This technique seems to offer a method to assess the long-term preference for a compound within one relatively short two-bottle preference session.

Alternate JournalPhysiol. Behav.