Evidence that carbohydrate-to-fat ratio and taste, but not energy density or NOVA level of processing, are determinants of food liking and food reward.

Nutrition and Behaviour Unit, School of Psychological Science, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom. Electronic address: peter.rogers@bristol.ac.uk. Nutrition and Behaviour Unit, School of Psychological Science, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom; Karadeniz Technical University, Faculty of Letters, Psychology Department, Kanuni Campus, Ortahisar, Trabzon, 61080, Türkiye. Nutrition and Behaviour Unit, School of Psychological Science, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom. School of Life and Environmental Sciences and Charles Perkins Centre, The University of Sydney, Australia.

Appetite. 2024;:107124
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Abstract

This virtual (online) study tested the common but largely untested assumptions that food energy density, level of processing (NOVA categories), and carbohydrate-to-fat (CF) ratio are key determinants of food reward. Individual participants (224 women and men, mean age 35 y, 53% with healthy weight, 43% with overweight or obesity) were randomised to one of three, within-subjects, study arms: energy density (32 foods), or level of processing (24 foods), or CF ratio (24 foods). They rated the foods for taste pleasantness (liking), desire to eat (food reward), and sweetness, saltiness, and flavour intensity (for analysis averaged as taste intensity). Against our hypotheses, there was not a positive relationship between liking or food reward and either energy density or level of processing. As hypothesised, foods combining more equal energy amounts of carbohydrate and fat (combo foods), and foods tasting more intense, scored higher on both liking and food reward. Further results were that CF ratio, taste intensity, and food fibre content (negatively), independent of energy density, accounted for 56% and 43% of the variance in liking and food reward, respectively. We interpret the results for CF ratio and fibre in terms of food energy-to-satiety ratio (ESR), where ESR for combo foods is high, and ESR for high-fibre foods is low. We suggest that the metric of ESR should be considered when designing future studies of effects of food composition on food reward, preference, and intake.

Methodological quality

Publication Type : Randomized Controlled Trial

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