Detail Information
Publications
The role of implicit wanting in relation to explicit liking and wanting for food: implications for appetite controlGraham Finlayson
Division of Psychology, Glasgow Caledonian University, Glasgow, Lanarkshire G4 0BA, UK
Appetite 50:120-7. 2008..We suggest that implicit W is not systematically downregulated by the physiological consequences of food consumption in the same way as hunger and therefore may be largely independent of homoeostatic processes influencing intake...
Is susceptibility to weight gain characterized by homeostatic or hedonic risk factors for overconsumption?John E Blundell
Psychobiology Group, School of Psychology, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK
Physiol Behav 82:21-5. 2004..The theme of this essay was inspired by Gerry Smith's conceptual and experimental work on both homeostatic and hedonic mechanisms implicated in the control of food intake...
Is it possible to dissociate 'liking' and 'wanting' for foods in humans? A novel experimental procedureGraham Finlayson
BioPsychology Group, Institute of Psychological Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK
Physiol Behav 90:36-42. 2007..Other experimental procedures may also be devised to separate 'liking' and 'wanting'...
