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Turns out, your sweet tooth may not be shaped by your diet. Findings from a new randomized controlled trial suggest that ...
Eating more sweet-tasting foods did not increase a person’s preference for sweet tastes, according to the results of a ...
A "sweet tooth" is down to genes rather than diet, suggests new research. Eating more or less sweet-tasting food doesn’t change how much people like sweet flavors, say scientists. The findings ...
A new study shows eating more or fewer sweet foods doesn't change your preference for sweetness - or your cravings.
The reported foods were categorized into five taste clusters: ‘sour-sweet,’ ‘sweet-fatty,’ ‘fatty-salty,’ ‘fatty,’ and ‘neutral.’ Clustering was based on a taste intensity ...
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