Interaction of The Chemical Senses With Nutrition

Author: Kare   Morley  

Publisher: Elsevier Science‎

Publication year: 2012

E-ISBN: 9780323147972

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780123978554

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9780123978554

Subject: Q434 chemoreceptor

Language: ENG

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Description

Interaction of the Chemical Senses with Nutrition provides an understanding of the relationship of smell and taste to nutrition. This book discusses how the flavor of food can have substantial physiological effects influencing ingestion, digestion, and metabolism.
Organized into five parts encompassing 21 chapters, this book starts with an overview of the significant role of saliva, which is involved in diet–taste relationships through dietary effects on saliva and salivary effects on taste perception. This text then reviews the literature on early salt acceptance in humans, contrasting and comparing those findings with data on the development of sweet preference. Other chapters consider the gustatory and anticipatory cephalic stimuli detected during a meal, which yield nutritional information and help in the efficient digestion of food. The final chapter deals with the transition stage in nutritional research.
This book is a valuable resource for nutritionists, psychophysicists, scientists, public health professionals, and researchers.

Chapter

Front Cover

pp.:  1 – 4

Copyright Page

pp.:  5 – 6

Table of Contents

pp.:  6 – 14

Contributors

pp.:  14 – 18

Participants

pp.:  18 – 20

Preface

pp.:  20 – 22

Samuel Lepkovsky

pp.:  22 – 26

Interaction of the Chemical Senses with Nutrition

pp.:  26 – 28

Part I: Effects of Nutritive State on Chemical Senses

pp.:  28 – 176

Part II: Effects of the Cephalic Phase on Digestion and Absorption

pp.:  176 – 272

Part III: Consequences of Food Palatability to Nutrition

pp.:  272 – 348

Part IV: Interplay of Chemical Senses with Nutrient Metabolism

pp.:  348 – 488

Part V: Conclusion

pp.:  488 – 496

Index

pp.:  496 – 505

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