综合一区欧美国产,99国产麻豆免费精品,九九精品黄色录像,亚洲激情青青草,久久亚洲熟妇熟,中文字幕av在线播放,国产一区二区卡,九九久久国产精品,久久精品视频免费

   

How we taste affects health - doctor

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-21 13:39

"People pile a lot of guilt on themselves," says Connecticut's Dr. Valerie Duffy, who is leading research into the links between inborn "preference palates" and health.

"We know oral sensation varies," she adds. "Instead of making one dietary recommendation for all, can we individualize it for what people like to eat?"

One in four people is what scientists call a supertaster, born with extra taste buds. "They live in a neon taste world," as Bartoshuk puts it.

They find some vegetables horribly bitter, and hate the texture. They get more burn from chili peppers, and perceive more sweetness than other people. Nor do they care for fat. They tend to be skinny because they're such picky eaters.

Scientists came up with the name because these people give an extreme "Yuck!" when given a certain bitter chemical widely used in taste research - a chemical that certain other people, dubbed nontasters, can't even detect.

Those nontasters make up another quarter of the population. They like veggies, but unfortunately prefer heart-clogging fat, too, along with sweets and alcohol.

Everybody else falls somewhere in-between.

The good news: You can train your taste buds. The variety of foods you ate as a child, and the emotional connections to certain foods, are more important than biology in determining food preferences, Bartoshuk says.

You may trick taste buds, too.

Consider: Duffy thinks many supertasters generalize, thinking they don't like most vegetables just because broccoli made them pucker. She calls Thanksgiving a great day for supertasters to try to expand their horizons because the traditional menu is heavy on sweetened vegetables - and sugar trumps bitterness.

Pair a bite of sweet potatoes with the broccoli, and veggie-haters might find the greenery tastes OK after all, she suggests. Or try caramelizing the leeks.

And remember, taste dulls with age - so the Brussels sprouts you hated at 20, you may like at 50.

But taste starts before a food actually touches the tongue. Even more important than sniffing its aroma is chewing, which releases vapors up the back of the nose. You think you're tasting a flavor that really you're unconsciously smelling. It's called retronasal olfaction, and it sends flavor information along a different, more sensitive brain pathway than traditional sniffing does.

The brain, meanwhile, is busy trying to regulate competing signals from stomach hormones that say "I'm full" with the yum factor.

Michigan researchers recently implanted electrodes into the brains of rats to track a pleasure-sensing region called the ventral pallidum. That region's cells fired in a frenzy when the rats ate a flavor, sweet or salt, that they craved, but slowly stopped as the rats got tired of eating the same old thing.

People have the same brain region, and Michigan psychologist Kent Berridge predicts it'll be in full swing at Thanksgiving dinner.

"At the moment you sit down and start to eat, that's when the firing's most intense and everything tastes delicious, more delicious than it's going to taste at any moment thereafter," he explains. "At the end, there are only a couple of things - like the dessert - that are going to make it fire again."


 12


Top World News  
Today's Top News  
Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours
小金县| 福海县| 北宁市| 洮南市| 新民市| 临湘市| 大余县| 张掖市| 潜山县| 民丰县| 镇远县| 宝鸡市| 济南市| 开远市| 宝应县| 黑河市| 公安县| 丹凤县| 石景山区| 遂平县| 双鸭山市| 辉南县| 紫云| 云南省| 和政县| 涞水县| 武乡县| 安徽省| 汝州市| 枣庄市| 淮南市| 普兰县| 纳雍县| 海晏县| 罗甸县| 宜宾市| 本溪市| 定南县| 新和县| 彭州市| 康定县|