An exploratory study of sweetness preference for habitual sugar and non-nutritive sweetener consumers revealed by explicit and implicit measures
Jiang J., Zhong F., Xu F., Xia Y., Spence C.
Abstract This study investigated whether hunger and satiety modulate hedonic, affective, autonomic, and prefrontal hemodynamic responses to sweetness-matched solutions in habitual consumers of sugar and non-nutritive sweeteners. Three iso-sweet stimuli (full-sucrose, half-sucrose, and zero-sucrose) were validated against a 6% sucrose reference using time-intensity and triangle tests. During hunger and satiety states, 15 participants per group evaluated the solutions using explicit measures (hedonic scales, Self-Assessment Manikins, and EsSense profile in check-all-that-apply format), while implicit physiological responses were recorded via electrocardiogram and functional near-infrared spectroscopy. Hunger increased liking for sweet solutions in both groups without selectively favoring caloric sugar over non-caloric sweetness. It also slightly enhanced emotional arousal and valence, shifting emotional profiles from “mild/bored” toward “joyful/interested/satisfied”. This shift was accompanied by significantly shorter R-R intervals and higher heart rate without significant increases in high-frequency power or root mean square of successive differences, indicating greater physiological arousal under hunger. Additionally, habitual non-nutritive sweetener consumption did not alter self-reported liking, affective responses, or electrocardiogram-derived autonomic indices under blind tasting. However, non-sugar group participants showed significantly higher oxygenated hemoglobin responses in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, suggesting enhanced control-related prefrontal processing during sweet-taste evaluation. These findings suggested that sweetness itself, rather than caloric content, drives hunger-related increases in immediate liking and physiological arousal. They also raised the possibility of sensory substitutability of non-nutritive sweeteners for fulfilling hedonic rather than metabolic needs.