Sodium appetite appears to be an excellent model to study the neural mechanisms of motivation. In this issue of Chemical Senses, experiments by St John (2016) challenge 2 hypotheses for how a systemic sodium deficit guides an animal to find and ingest more Na+ ions in the environment. Both hypotheses deal with modifications of the sensory neural code produced by Na++ ions on the tongue. One envisions a change in the Na++ signal amplitude. A reduction could make the strong Na++ signals less aversive; an increase, weak signals more noticeable. The other hypothesis requires no changes in the identity or amplitude of the Na++ signal, but a shift in its hedonic tone toward sweetness or reward. The results of the 3 behavioral experiments render both explanations unlikely but fail to suggest alternatives.
CITATION STYLE
Norgren, R. (2017, February 1). Sodium taste during sodium appetite. Chemical Senses. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/chemse/bjw112
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