Aspartame and sucrose effects on the reaction time of young children

Twenty "normal" (non-hyperactive) preschool children (9 girls, 11 boys) and 6 schoolage boys were maintained on a low sucrose diet for two weeks. During the second week, subjects were randomly assigned to one of two treatments (drink sweetened with either sucrose or aspartame). Cherry-flav...

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Main Author: Dempsey, Constance Lindsey
Other Authors: Family and Child Development
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/76426
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-764262020-09-29T05:48:09Z Aspartame and sucrose effects on the reaction time of young children Dempsey, Constance Lindsey Family and Child Development LD5655.V855 1984.D456 Sugar-free diet Children -- Nutrition Reaction time Twenty "normal" (non-hyperactive) preschool children (9 girls, 11 boys) and 6 schoolage boys were maintained on a low sucrose diet for two weeks. During the second week, subjects were randomly assigned to one of two treatments (drink sweetened with either sucrose or aspartame). Cherry-flavored drinks mixed in a distilled water base were given daily. Subjects in the sucrose group received 3.4 g sucrose per kilogram of body weight, mixed to a concentration of 25 g per 100 ml. Subjects in the aspartame group received the same cherry-flavored drink mixed to a concentration of 8 g of aspartame per 100 ml of drink. A simple reaction-time task measured attention and alertness three times during the study: (1) prior to the low sucrose diet; (2) after one week of the low sucrose diet; (3) after one week of receiving the treatment. The dependent variable was the difference between reaction time at time 3 (after treatment) and time 2 (at the end of one week of a low sucrose diet). An ANCOVA (2 levels of treatment, age as covariate) revealed no significant difference in the mean reaction times of the subjects in the sucrose and aspartame groups. However, the variance in reaction times for those in the sucrose treatment group was significantly greater (p̱< .03) than for those in the aspartame group. Master of Science 2017-03-10T21:43:45Z 2017-03-10T21:43:45Z 1984 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/76426 en_US OCLC# 11193233 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ vii, 103 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1984.D456
Sugar-free diet
Children -- Nutrition
Reaction time
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1984.D456
Sugar-free diet
Children -- Nutrition
Reaction time
Dempsey, Constance Lindsey
Aspartame and sucrose effects on the reaction time of young children
description Twenty "normal" (non-hyperactive) preschool children (9 girls, 11 boys) and 6 schoolage boys were maintained on a low sucrose diet for two weeks. During the second week, subjects were randomly assigned to one of two treatments (drink sweetened with either sucrose or aspartame). Cherry-flavored drinks mixed in a distilled water base were given daily. Subjects in the sucrose group received 3.4 g sucrose per kilogram of body weight, mixed to a concentration of 25 g per 100 ml. Subjects in the aspartame group received the same cherry-flavored drink mixed to a concentration of 8 g of aspartame per 100 ml of drink. A simple reaction-time task measured attention and alertness three times during the study: (1) prior to the low sucrose diet; (2) after one week of the low sucrose diet; (3) after one week of receiving the treatment. The dependent variable was the difference between reaction time at time 3 (after treatment) and time 2 (at the end of one week of a low sucrose diet). An ANCOVA (2 levels of treatment, age as covariate) revealed no significant difference in the mean reaction times of the subjects in the sucrose and aspartame groups. However, the variance in reaction times for those in the sucrose treatment group was significantly greater (p̱< .03) than for those in the aspartame group. === Master of Science
author2 Family and Child Development
author_facet Family and Child Development
Dempsey, Constance Lindsey
author Dempsey, Constance Lindsey
author_sort Dempsey, Constance Lindsey
title Aspartame and sucrose effects on the reaction time of young children
title_short Aspartame and sucrose effects on the reaction time of young children
title_full Aspartame and sucrose effects on the reaction time of young children
title_fullStr Aspartame and sucrose effects on the reaction time of young children
title_full_unstemmed Aspartame and sucrose effects on the reaction time of young children
title_sort aspartame and sucrose effects on the reaction time of young children
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/76426
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