Research to be presented at the upcoming annual meeting of the Society for the Study of Ingestive Behavior (SSIB), the foremost society for research into all aspects of eating and drinking behavior, indicates that caffeine added to sugar-sweetened, carbonated beverages teaches adolescents to prefer those beverages. Researchers found that the amount of caffeine added to an unfamiliar beverage was correlated with how much teenagers liked that beverage.
“Soda manufacturers claim that caffeine is added to their products to enhance flavor. However, the majority of people cannot taste the difference between caffeinated and non-caffeinated soda. This led us to suspect that caffeine may be added to beverages for other reasons,” said senior author Jennifer Temple, Ph.D. “We hypothesized that adolescents who repeatedly consume a new and unfamiliar drink that contains caffeine would like that beverage more over time, but that adolescents who drank an unfamiliar beverage without caffeine would show no change in their preference.”
To test this theory, adolescents aged 12-17 visited the laboratory multiple times. During each visit, they sampled an unfamiliar soda drink and rated their liking or preference for that beverage. The sodas contained varying amounts of caffeine, and the caffeinated or non-caffeinated versions were varied across participants. Over repeated testing days, participants increased their liking of the soda with the highest levels of caffeine, whereas there was no change in preference for sodas with low or no caffeine.
These results are consistent with prior evidence that teens prefer sodas that contain caffeine compared to those that do not, and newly demonstrate that this preference emerges as a learned behavior.
Lead Author: J. Temple (Department of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences; School of Public Health and Health Professions; SUNY at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA)
Co-Authors: A.M. Ziegler, A. Bendlin, Y. Kosar, A.M. Graczyk, S. O’Leary, K.E. Vattana (Department of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences; School of Public Health and Health Professions; SUNY at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA)
Contact Author: Dr. Jennifer Temple, Assistant Professor
Email: [email protected]
Telephone: (716) 829-5593