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A bitter sweet asynchrony. The relation between eating attitudes, dietary restraint on smell and taste function

Authors :
Megan Tucker
Nora Gerstner
Lorenzo D. Stafford
Source :
Stafford, L, Tucker, M & Gerstner, N 2013, ' A bitter sweet asynchrony: the relation between eating attitudes, dietary restraint on smell and taste function ', Appetite, vol. 70, pp. 31-36 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2013.06.084
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Research has demonstrated that individuals with eating disorders have an impaired sense of smell and taste, though the influence of eating attitudes, dietary restraint and gender in a non-clinical sample is unknown. In two studies (study 1: 32 females, 28 males; study 2: 29 females) participants completed questionnaires relating to Eating Attitudes (EAT) and dietary restraint (DEBQ) followed by an odour (study 1: isoamyl acetate, study 2: chocolate) threshold and taste test. In study 2 we also measured the number of fungiform papillae taste buds. Study one revealed that increases in pathological eating attitudes predicted poorer olfactory sensitivity (males/females) and lower bitterness ratings for the bitter tastant (females only), suggestive of poorer taste acuity. In study two we found that both eating attitudes and restraint predicted poorer sensitivity to an odour associated to a forbidden food (chocolate) and that increasing eating attitudes predicted higher sweetness ratings for the bitter tastant. Interestingly increases in restraint were associated with an increased number of fungiform papillae which was not related to bitter or sweet intensity. These findings demonstrate that in a young healthy sample that subtle differences in eating pathology and dietary restraint predict impaired olfactory function to food related odours. Further that perception of bitter tastants is poorer with changes in eating pathology but not dietary restraint.

Details

ISSN :
10958304
Volume :
70
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Appetite
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0dcd4f2a83f7b07ddaf98e506dd563b8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2013.06.084