Conditioned satiety

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Conditioned satiety is one of the three known food-specific forms of suppression of appetite for food by effects of eating, along with alimentary alliesthesia and sensory-specific satiety. Conditioned satiety was first evidenced in 1955[1] in rats by the late French physiologist professor Jacques Le Magnen. The term was coined in 1972[2] by professor David Allenby Booth. Unlike the other two sorts of stimulus-specific satiety, this phenomenon is based on classical conditioning[3][4][5] but is distinct from conditioned taste aversion (CTA) in its dependence on internal state towards the end of a meal.

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