Build a lasting personal brand

Hunger Amplifies Sweet Taste Appeal Independently of Calories, Study Finds

A new study reveals that hunger enhances the liking and physiological arousal triggered by sweetness itself, not by calories, while habitual non-nutritive sweetener users show increased brain activity in self-control regions.
Hunger Amplifies Sweet Taste Appeal Independently of Calories, Study Finds

A recent study published in Food Quality and Safety on May 20, 2026, reveals that hunger amplifies the immediate liking and physiological arousal triggered by sweetness itself, regardless of whether the sweetener contains calories. The research, conducted by scientists from Jiangnan University in China and the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom, provides new insights into how metabolic state and long-term dietary habits shape sweet taste preferences.

Excessive sugar intake is a major driver of obesity, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. Non-nutritive sweeteners (NNS) have been widely adopted as low-calorie alternatives, but concerns exist that chronic NNS consumption might decouple sweet taste from metabolic energy signaling, potentially reshaping taste preferences and reward pathways. Long-term trials have yielded conflicting results, prompting deeper investigation into how hunger and habitual NNS use jointly influence sweet preference.

The study directly compared habitual sugar consumers and habitual NNS consumers, measuring their responses to sweetness-matched solutions under both hungry and satiated conditions. Using subjective ratings, emotional assessments, electrocardiogram (ECG), and functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), the team uncovered a dissociation between self-reported liking and brain/body responses.

Participants consistently rated all sweet solutions as more enjoyable when hungry, regardless of whether they contained sugar or NNS. This hunger-driven boost in liking was accompanied by physiological signs of sympathetic nervous system arousal, including significantly shortened R-R intervals and increased heart rate. Contrary to initial hypotheses, hunger did not selectively favor caloric sugar over non-caloric sweetness. The craving for energy made sweetness itself more appealing, not the calories behind it.

More strikingly, habitual NNS consumers showed a distinct neural signature. While their self-reported liking and emotional responses did not differ from sugar consumers, fNIRS revealed significantly stronger oxygenated hemoglobin responses in their left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC)—a key region for cognitive control, dietary self-regulation, and resisting temptation. This neural difference emerged even though all samples were tasted blindly and matched for sweetness intensity. The study's emotion analysis using check-all-that-apply involved a small sample of 15 participants per group, so those findings should be interpreted with caution.

"Hunger seems to turn up the volume on sweetness itself, making it more appealing whether it comes with calories or not," the authors said. "That was a surprise—we expected hungry people to reach specifically for sugar. But we also saw that habitual NNS users showed a stronger brain response in a region linked to self-control. It is as if their brains are working a little harder to keep their sweet intake in check. This doesn't prove that zero-calorie sweeteners are good or bad, but it does suggest they are not simply neutral—they may change how our brains handle sweet tastes over time."

These findings offer practical guidance for public health and the food industry. Because hunger enhances the appeal of any sweet taste, replacing sugar with NNS in snacks consumed between meals might still satisfy cravings without adding calories. The heightened brain activity in habitual NNS users raises the possibility that these sweeteners could help reinforce cognitive control over food choices, though this remains to be tested. For now, the study suggests that sweetness itself—not just its energy content—powerfully drives hunger-related eating behavior. Reformulating products to be less sweet overall, while ensuring they are still pleasurable, may be a more effective long-term strategy than simply swapping sugar for zero-calorie alternatives.

The research was funded by the National Key Research and Development Program of China and the Collaborative Innovation Center of Food Safety and Quality Control in Jiangsu Province. The full study is available at https://doi.org/10.1093/fqsafe/fyag046. Food Quality and Safety is an open access journal covering food quality, safety, nutrition, and health.

Burstable Editorial Team

Burstable Editorial Team

@burstable

Burstable News™ is a hosted solution designed to help businesses build an audience and enhance their AIO and SEO press release strategies by automatically providing fresh, unique, and brand-aligned business news content. It eliminates the overhead of engineering, maintenance, and content creation, offering an easy, no-developer-needed implementation that works on any website. The service focuses on boosting site authority with vertically-aligned stories that are guaranteed unique and compliant with Google's E-E-A-T guidelines to keep your site dynamic and engaging.