Individual Differences in the Efficacy of Sodium Chloride and Sucrose as Bitterness Suppressors of Brassicaceae Vegetables

abstract: The unpleasant bitter taste found in many nutritious vegetables may deter their consumption. While bitterness suppression by prototypical tastants is well-studied in the chemical and pharmacological fields, mechanisms to reduce the bitterness of foods such as vegetables remain to be eluci...

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Other Authors: Wilkie, Lynn Melissa (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25828
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-258282018-06-22T03:05:19Z Individual Differences in the Efficacy of Sodium Chloride and Sucrose as Bitterness Suppressors of Brassicaceae Vegetables abstract: The unpleasant bitter taste found in many nutritious vegetables may deter their consumption. While bitterness suppression by prototypical tastants is well-studied in the chemical and pharmacological fields, mechanisms to reduce the bitterness of foods such as vegetables remain to be elucidated. Here tastants representing the taste primaries of salty and sweet were investigated as potential bitterness suppressors of three types of Brassicaceae vegetables. The secondary aim of these studies was to determine whether the bitter masking agents were differentially effective for bitter-sensitive and bitter-insensitive individuals. In all experiments, participants rated vegetables plain and with the addition of tastants. In Experiments 1-3, sucrose and NNS suppressed the bitterness of broccoli, Brussels sprouts, and cauliflower, whereas NaCl did not. Varying concentrations of NaCl and sucrose were introduced in Experiment 4 to assess the dose-dependency of the effects. While sucrose was a robust bitterness suppressor, NaCl suppressed bitterness only for participants who perceived the plain Brussels sprouts as highly bitter. Experiment 5, through the implementation of a rigorous control condition, determined that some but not all of this effect can be accounted for by regression to the mean. Individual variability in taste perception as determined by sampling of aqueous bitter, salty, and sweet solutions did not influence the degree of suppression by NaCl or sucrose. Consumption of vegetables is deterred by their bitter taste. Utilizing tastants to mask bitterness, a technique that preserves endogenous nutrients, can circumvent this issue. Sucrose is a robust bitter suppressor whereas the efficacy of NaCl is dependent upon bitterness perception of the plain vegetables. Dissertation/Thesis Wilkie, Lynn Melissa (Author) Capaldi Phillips, Elizabeth D (Advisor) Cohen, Adam (Committee member) Johnston, Carol (Committee member) Sanabria, Federico (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Psychology Bitterness Salt Sucrose Suppression Taste Vegetables eng 142 pages Doctoral Dissertation Psychology 2014 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25828 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2014
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
Bitterness
Salt
Sucrose
Suppression
Taste
Vegetables
spellingShingle Psychology
Bitterness
Salt
Sucrose
Suppression
Taste
Vegetables
Individual Differences in the Efficacy of Sodium Chloride and Sucrose as Bitterness Suppressors of Brassicaceae Vegetables
description abstract: The unpleasant bitter taste found in many nutritious vegetables may deter their consumption. While bitterness suppression by prototypical tastants is well-studied in the chemical and pharmacological fields, mechanisms to reduce the bitterness of foods such as vegetables remain to be elucidated. Here tastants representing the taste primaries of salty and sweet were investigated as potential bitterness suppressors of three types of Brassicaceae vegetables. The secondary aim of these studies was to determine whether the bitter masking agents were differentially effective for bitter-sensitive and bitter-insensitive individuals. In all experiments, participants rated vegetables plain and with the addition of tastants. In Experiments 1-3, sucrose and NNS suppressed the bitterness of broccoli, Brussels sprouts, and cauliflower, whereas NaCl did not. Varying concentrations of NaCl and sucrose were introduced in Experiment 4 to assess the dose-dependency of the effects. While sucrose was a robust bitterness suppressor, NaCl suppressed bitterness only for participants who perceived the plain Brussels sprouts as highly bitter. Experiment 5, through the implementation of a rigorous control condition, determined that some but not all of this effect can be accounted for by regression to the mean. Individual variability in taste perception as determined by sampling of aqueous bitter, salty, and sweet solutions did not influence the degree of suppression by NaCl or sucrose. Consumption of vegetables is deterred by their bitter taste. Utilizing tastants to mask bitterness, a technique that preserves endogenous nutrients, can circumvent this issue. Sucrose is a robust bitter suppressor whereas the efficacy of NaCl is dependent upon bitterness perception of the plain vegetables. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Psychology 2014
author2 Wilkie, Lynn Melissa (Author)
author_facet Wilkie, Lynn Melissa (Author)
title Individual Differences in the Efficacy of Sodium Chloride and Sucrose as Bitterness Suppressors of Brassicaceae Vegetables
title_short Individual Differences in the Efficacy of Sodium Chloride and Sucrose as Bitterness Suppressors of Brassicaceae Vegetables
title_full Individual Differences in the Efficacy of Sodium Chloride and Sucrose as Bitterness Suppressors of Brassicaceae Vegetables
title_fullStr Individual Differences in the Efficacy of Sodium Chloride and Sucrose as Bitterness Suppressors of Brassicaceae Vegetables
title_full_unstemmed Individual Differences in the Efficacy of Sodium Chloride and Sucrose as Bitterness Suppressors of Brassicaceae Vegetables
title_sort individual differences in the efficacy of sodium chloride and sucrose as bitterness suppressors of brassicaceae vegetables
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25828
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