The IEQ appears to be a useful tool to support the comprehensive psychosocial assessment of injured workers with long-term disability secondary to a musculoskeletal disorder. In addition to identifying perceived injustice, the IEQ may also be used to inform the choice of psychological interventions. The IEQ has construct validity and generalizability across different populations of injured workers.
Taste sensitivity for a given subject generally has been thought to be genetically determined and not plastic. Yet experience-inducible changes in human taste and olfactory sensitivities have been reported. To test a taste induction hypothesis, we exposed 17 Americans/Europeans to monosodium glutamate (MSG) in food and then compared their ability to identify MSG taste with that of 2 control groups (18 Americans/Europeans without MSG exposure and 18 Japanese). When tested on Day 11 or 12, the Americans/Europeans exposed to MSG were able to identify MSG at significantly lower concentrations than the Americans/Europeans without MSG exposure. Moreover, Japanese subjects who had prior extensive experience with MSG in Japanese food were able to identify MSG at significantly lower concentrations than the two American/European groups. The differences in identification ability between the two American/European groups challenge the notion of taste sensitivity as stable over time and support the hypothesis of an experience-inducible component in human taste.
A few studies have reported experience-inducible changes in human taste and olfactory sensitivities. However, no study thus far has systematically characterized the stability of the enhanced sensitivities. In our previous study, we found increases in taste identification ability for monosodium glutamate (MSG) in subjects who had been briefly exposed to MSG in food for 10 days. Here, we tested the temporal stability of the enhanced taste identification ability. First, we exposed a group of 20 subjects to MSG in food and then compared their sensitivities to MSG with those of a control group. When tested on day 11 or 12, the mean MSG taste identification ability of the MSG-exposed group was significantly higher than the control group. Next, 11 of the subjects who were exposed to MSG in food initially, and then stopped being exposed performed significantly poorer in identifying MSG after 10 days of the nonexposure than they did 10 days before. In contrast, nine subjects who were exposed to MSG initially and continued being exposed maintained their high identification levels. These results support earlier finding of the plasticity in the taste identification of MSG and show that the enhanced identification ability can be reversed rapidly when MSG exposure is not sustained.
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