Three independent measures of sweet taste liking have weak and inconsistent associations with sugar and sweet food intake - insights from the sweet tooth study
Authors: Čad, E.M., van der Kruijssen, M., Tang, C.S., Pretorius, L., de Jong, H.B.T., Mars, M., Appleton, K.M., de Graaf, K.
Journal: Food Quality and Preference
Publication Date: 01/09/2025
Volume: 130
ISSN: 0950-3293
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodqual.2025.105536
Abstract:Authoritative public health agencies, like the WHO, recommend reducing dietary sweetness to lower sweet liking, and thereby indirectly lowering sugar and energy intake. However, data on an association between sweetness liking and sugar/sweet food intake are inconsistent. Moreover, sweetness liking can be measured in various ways, and the agreement between methods is unclear. Baseline data from the Sweet Tooth study (n = 178) were used to evaluate the agreement between three different measures of sweetness liking and their association with sugar and sweet food intake. Sweetness liking was assed by: 1) psychohedonic sweetness functions, 2) sweet liker phenotype, and 3) self-reported sweet / fat-sweet preference. Sugar and sweet food intake were assessed via 24-h recall and a FFQ assessing the consumption of food groups based on taste (TasteFFQ). On a group level, the three sweetness liking measures showed similar results; sweet liker phenotype showed higher liking of high sweetness levels (F
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/41018/
Source: Scopus
Three independent measures of sweet taste liking have weak and inconsistent associations with sugar and sweet food intake - insights from the sweet tooth study
Authors: Cad, E.M., van der Kruijssen, M., Tang, C.S., Pretorius, L., de Jong, H.B.T., Mars, M., Appleton, K.M., de Graaf, K.
Journal: FOOD QUALITY AND PREFERENCE
Publication Date: 09/2025
Volume: 130
eISSN: 1873-6343
ISSN: 0950-3293
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodqual.2025.105536
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/41018/
Source: Web of Science