21 research outputs found
Impact of calcium on salivary α-amylase activity, starch paste apparent viscosity and thickness perception
Thickness perception of starch-thickened products
during eating has been linked to starch viscosity and
salivary amylase activity. Calcium is an essential cofactor
for α-amylase and there is anecdotal evidence that adding
extra calcium affects amylase activity in processes like
mashing of beer. The aims of this paper were to (1) investigate the role of salivary calcium on α-amylase
activity and (2) to measure the effect of calcium concentration on apparent viscosity and thickness perception when interacting with salivary α-amylase in starch-based samples.
α-Amylase activity in saliva samples from 28 people
was assessed using a typical starch pasting cycle (up to 95 °C). The activity of the enzyme (as measured by the change in starch apparent viscosity) was maintained by the presence of calcium, probably by protecting the enzyme from heat denaturation. Enhancement of α-amylase activity by calcium at 37 °C was also observed although to a smaller extent. Sensory analysis showed a general trend of decreased
thickness perception in the presence of calcium, but the result was only significant for one pair of samples, suggesting a limited impact of calcium enhanced enzyme activity on perceived thickness
Virtual Prototypes and Product Models in Mechanical Engineering
This paper gives an overview of some of the modelling and virtual prototyping techniques used in product realization, with emphasis on the mechanical engineering eld. It is pointed out that virtual prototypes, in the commonly accepted sense of computer models permitting realistic graphical simulation, represent only one class amongst the many types of computer models used in design and planning for manufacture. Each such model is usually created for some comparatively narrow purpose, and one of the major problems faced by developers of integrated computer-aided product realization systems concerns the transmutation of one type of model into another. A related problem is that of interpretation by any model of information generated by interrogations of another model. These diculties are compounded by the increasing presence in such models of semantic information concerning dierent aspects of the intended functionality or manufacturing requirements of the modelled artefact. Keywords M..