Alliesthesia (αλλιώς (alliós) - changed, and αίσθησης (aísthēsis) - sensation, perception ; french : alliesthésie, german : Alliästhesie) describes the dependence of the perception of pleasure or disgust perceived when consuming a stimulus on the "milieu intérieur" of the organism. Therefore, a stimulus capable of ameliorating the state of the interior milieu, will be perceived as pleasant. In contrary, a stimulus disturbing the milieu interne of the organism will be perceived as unpleasant or even painful. The sensation elicited therefore depends not only on the quality or on the intensity of the stimulus, but also on internal receptors, and is subjective.
Alliesthesia is a physiologic phenomenon and should not be confounded with
the pathologic symptom of allesthesia.
A phenomenon similar to alliesthesia is the related
"sensory-specific satiety".
Each of these forms of alliesthesia exists in two opposite tendencies:
The principal researcher of the phenomenon of 'alliesthesia is the french physiologist Michel Cabanac, a former student of professeur Jacques Le Magnen. The first scientific publication from 1968[2] was succeeded by over 40 publications in international journals, for example: 1970 in Nature[3] and 1971 in Science[4]. The term "alliesthesia", as mentioned in the annex of Physiological Role of Pleasure, has been chosen in collaboration with coauthor Stylianos Nicolaïdis. Originally, alliesthesia has been discovered by experiments in human subjects, and later been confirmed in rats (Rattus norvegicus).
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