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2. Implicit Measures of Food 'Wanting'

3. Recent Smell Loss Is the Best Predictor of COVID-19 Among Individuals With Recent Respiratory Symptoms.

5. More than smell – COVID-19 is associated with severe impairment of smell, taste, and chemesthesis

15. Taste It! 7-Day exposure to a protein-enriched milk drink increases its smell, taste, and flavor familiarity and facilitates acquisition of taste familiarity of a novel protein drink

16. Covid-19 affects taste independently of smell: results from a combined chemosensory home test and online survey from a global cohort (N=10,953)

17. Covid-19 affects taste independent of taste–smell confusions: results from a combined chemosensory home test and online survey from a large global cohort

18. Nutrition claims influence expectations about food attributes, attenuate activity in reward‐associated brain regions during tasting, but do not impact pleasantness

19. GCCR003: Follow-up study on the relation between COVID-19 and long-term chemosensory loss

20. Is olfactory loss a sensitive symptomatic predictor of COVID-19? A preregistered, crowdsourced study

21. GCCR004: The relationship of self-reported chemosensory abilities and experienced chemosensory intensities in the GCCR Taste & Smell Check

22. GCCR0005 - Recovery of smell after COVID-19 or other respiratory illness

23. GCCR001 - More than smell - COVID-19 is associated with severe impairment of smell, taste, and chemesthesis

24. GCCR002: Value of quantifying smell, taste, and chemesthesis changes in the differential diagnosis of COVID19 vs other respiratory illnesses: a multi-national study

32. Mere end lugtesans - COVID-19 er associeret med svær påvirkning af lugtesansen, smagssansen og mundfølelsen

33. Leveraging machine learning and self-administered tests to predict COVID-19: An olfactory and gustatory dysfunction assessment through crowd-sourced data in India

34. Recent Smell Loss Is the Best Predictor of COVID-19 Among Individuals With Recent Respiratory Symptoms

36. Increasing incidence of parosmia and phantosmia in patients recovering from COVID-19 smell loss

38. Corrigendum to: More than smell: COVID-19 is associated with severe impairment of smell, taste, and chemesthesis

41. The best COVID-19 predictor is recent smell loss: a cross-sectional study

44. From loss to recovery: how to effectively assess chemosensory impairments during COVID-19 pandemic

46. Recent smell loss is the best predictor of COVID-19:a preregistered, cross-sectional study

47. Recent smell loss is the best predictor of COVID-19: a preregistered, cross-sectional study

48. Repeatability of Taste Recognition Threshold Measurements with QUEST and Quick Yes–No

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