Optimal Choice in Diet: Test of a Hypothesis

The optimal-choice hypothesis as it relates to food preferences predicts, for any given amounts of food offered and eaten, the proportion of each food type in the diet. This paper reports an experiment designed to test the accuracy with which the hypothesis can be applied to laboratory mice. Results show that fairly accurate prediction of observed food preferences can be achieved, but only if corrections are made for imperfect decision making by the feeding animals.

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