Results of the Sweet Taste Cognitive Threshold Test of 38 Peoples who Participated in the Sweet Teste Test using Teste-Disks at the University Festival

α
Shoko Kondo
Shoko Kondo
σ
Mayumi Hirabayashi
Mayumi Hirabayashi
ρ
Akemi Ito
Akemi Ito
Ѡ
Naomi Katayama
Naomi Katayama
α Nagoya Women's University Nagoya Women's University

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Results of the Sweet Taste Cognitive Threshold Test of 38 Peoples who Participated in the Sweet Teste Test using Teste-Disks at the University Festival

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Abstract

Although sugar intake did not directly lead to diabetes, the results will vary depending on age, sex, individual differences, and the nature of sugar ingested. However, the change in blood glucose level and the accumulation of fat in the body cannot neglected about the sugar intake. Also, if the sweetness recognition threshold increases, the intake of sugar may increase. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to conduct a sweetness cognitive threshold test to understand the sensitivity of the general public to sweetness. The acceptable range (sugar concentration of 2.5% or less) was 25 out of 38 participants who recognized sweetness, 65.8% of the total. Two of the 14 male participants were unrecognizable even at the sweetest concentration of 80.0%. Females had better sweetness perception threshold results than males. In the future, we think it would be good to use a questionnaire to investigate the usual eating habits and compare it with the wetness cognitive threshold test results.

References

8 Cites in Article
  1. Giuseppe Sergi,Giulia Bano,Simona Pizzato,Nicola Veronese,Enzo Manzato (2017). Taste loss in the elderly: Possible implications for dietary habits.
  2. Pei Liang,Jiayu Jiang,Qingguo Ding,Xiaoyan Tang,Soumyajit Roy (2018). Memory Load Influences Taste Sensitivities.
  3. A Hoffman,R Salgado,C Dresler,R Faller,C Bartlett (2016). Flavour perferences in youth versus adults: a review.
  4. R Dipple,J Elias (1980). Preferences for sweet in relationship to use of oral contraceptives and pregnancy.
  5. Ezen Choo,Robin Dando (2017). The Impact of Pregnancy on Taste Function.
  6. Jacob Steiner,Dieter Glaser,Maria Hawilo,Kent Berridge (2001). Comparative expression of hedonic impact: affective reactions to taste by human infants and other primates.
  7. Š Podzimek,M Dušková,Z Broukal,B Rácz,L Stárka,J Dušková (2018). The Evolution of Taste and Perinatal Programming of Taste Preferences.
  8. Emma Feeney,Sinead O'brien,Amalia Scannell,Anne Markey,Eileen Gibney (2017). Suprathreshold measures of taste perception in children - Association with dietary quality and body weight.

Funding

No external funding was declared for this work.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Ethical Approval

No ethics committee approval was required for this article type.

Data Availability

Not applicable for this article.

How to Cite This Article

Shoko Kondo. 2020. \u201cResults of the Sweet Taste Cognitive Threshold Test of 38 Peoples who Participated in the Sweet Teste Test using Teste-Disks at the University Festival\u201d. Global Journal of Medical Research - K: Interdisciplinary GJMR-K Volume 20 (GJMR Volume 20 Issue K8): .

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Journal Specifications

Crossref Journal DOI 10.17406/gjmra

Print ISSN 0975-5888

e-ISSN 2249-4618

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GJMR-K Classification: NLMC Code: WD 200
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v1.2

Issue date

July 31, 2020

Language
en
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Published Article

Although sugar intake did not directly lead to diabetes, the results will vary depending on age, sex, individual differences, and the nature of sugar ingested. However, the change in blood glucose level and the accumulation of fat in the body cannot neglected about the sugar intake. Also, if the sweetness recognition threshold increases, the intake of sugar may increase. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to conduct a sweetness cognitive threshold test to understand the sensitivity of the general public to sweetness. The acceptable range (sugar concentration of 2.5% or less) was 25 out of 38 participants who recognized sweetness, 65.8% of the total. Two of the 14 male participants were unrecognizable even at the sweetest concentration of 80.0%. Females had better sweetness perception threshold results than males. In the future, we think it would be good to use a questionnaire to investigate the usual eating habits and compare it with the wetness cognitive threshold test results.

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Results of the Sweet Taste Cognitive Threshold Test of 38 Peoples who Participated in the Sweet Teste Test using Teste-Disks at the University Festival

Mayumi Hirabayashi
Mayumi Hirabayashi
Akemi Ito
Akemi Ito
Naomi Katayama
Naomi Katayama

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