Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Decoded: Why People Love To Have Coffee Or Beer

IANS, 03 May, 2019 08:46 PM
  • Decoded: Why People Love To Have Coffee Or Beer

Whether you choose a dark roast coffee or hoppy beer in the summer, it may actually depend on how the drink makes you feel rather than how it tastes, reveals a genome-based study.


The researchers searched for variations in our taste genes that could explain our beverage preferences because understanding those preferences could indicate ways to intervene in people's diets.


They found that taste preferences for bitter or sweet beverages are not based on variations in our taste genes but rather genes related to the psychoactive properties of these beverages.


"People like the way coffee and alcohol make them feel. That's why they drink it. It's not the taste," said Marilyn Cornelis, Assistant Professor at Northwestern University Feinberg's School of Medicine.


For the study published in the journal Human Molecular Genetics, beverages were categorised into a bitter-tasting group and a sweet-tasting group.


Bitter included coffee, tea, grapefruit juice, beer, red wine and liquor.


The researchers provided questionnaires to about 336,000 individuals asking them to report what they ate and drank over the past 24 hours.


The scientists also did a genome-wide association study of bitter beverage consumption and of sweet beverage consumption.


"To our knowledge, this is the first genome-wide association study of beverage consumption based on taste perspective.


"It's also the most comprehensive genome-wide association study of beverage consumption to date," said Victor Zhong, the study's lead author.


According to the researcher Marilyn Cornelis, the study highlights important behavior-reward components to beverage choice and adds to our understanding of the link between genetics and beverage consumption -- and the potential barriers to intervening in people's diets.

MORE Life ARTICLES

Unemployment Can Change Your Personality

Unemployment Can Change Your Personality
Unemployment could be a vicious cycle. It can change peoples' core personality -- making some less conscientious, agreeable and open -- which may make it difficult for them to find new jobs, says a study.

Unemployment Can Change Your Personality

Check Partner's Fingers As You Kneel To Propose

Check Partner's Fingers As You Kneel To Propose
Have a good look at your partner's fingers during the ring ceremony as men with short index fingers and long ring fingers are nicer towards women, says a study.

Check Partner's Fingers As You Kneel To Propose

'Indo-European' Languages First Emerged 6,500 Years Ago

'Indo-European' Languages First Emerged 6,500 Years Ago
Using data from over 150 languages, linguists from University of California, Berkeley have found that "Indo-European languages" originated 5,500-6,500 years ago on the Pontic-Caspian steppe stretching from Moldova, Ukraine to Russia and western Kazakhstan.

'Indo-European' Languages First Emerged 6,500 Years Ago

Women Doctors At Higher Divorce Risk

Women Doctors At Higher Divorce Risk
Female physicians are approximately one and a half times more likely to be divorced than male physicians of a similar age, says a study.

Women Doctors At Higher Divorce Risk

How Stress Can Make You Poorer

How Stress Can Make You Poorer
Stress can make people with high level of anxiety poorer by denting their confidence to compete, suggests a new study. The findings suggest that stress can even be a cause of social inequality rather than just a consequence of it.

How Stress Can Make You Poorer

Why Workplace Bullying Goes Underreported

Why Workplace Bullying Goes Underreported
Bullying at work deteriorates mental health of victims so much that they become anxious, leaving them less able to stand up for themselves and more vulnerable to further harassment, warns a study.

Why Workplace Bullying Goes Underreported