Z
Variable Constant
I found out today that marshmellows have Blue 1 in them.
Why?
Why?
The problem so far is finding dyed and undyed versions of the exact same food, to control for the presence of other ingredients... it's pretty challenging.
Buy undyed foods and add coloring to them yourself. You could have a different color of mashed potatoes every night. I'm not sure what varieties of off-the-shelf food coloring are available, though. I know you can buy them in several different forms (liquid, paste, "pure" pigment powders, etc.), but I don't know if you would have access to all of the basic colors used in commercial applications.
What I really don't understand is how an allergy can induce altered psychological behavior. Am I the only one wondering about that?
We don't even know how ADD works, other then that there are AT LEAST 2 mechanisms on a molecular-neurologic mechanisms identified (don't ask for a refence, old lecture I had...). Neither of which I can link to allergies of any kind.
And what type of allergy are we talking about anyway? Soulds like type 1 based on hapten recognition. Isn't it more likely to see anaphylaxis rather then altered psychological behavior in that case?
how does one test for a sensitivity to these substances? just eat them and observe?
Well, the simply answer to that is that ADD/ADHD isn't a purely psychological phenomenon like The Observer implied. It's a neurochemical condition, aka physiological, that results in an inability to focus, as well excessive physical restlessness (including involuntary movements in extreme cases).Nope - lots of researchers wonder about it, too. And it's not, technically, an allergy... it's a sensitivity.
It's worse than that... we don't even know how many different and divergent problems have been lumped unceremoniously together under the ADD banner.
zaay, you do understand that this test is not wholely scientific and might be torn apart my skepticists who could compare said effect to that of Placebo?zaayrdragon said:That's a rough sketch, yeah. Basically, you have to go off of them long enough to 'clear the system', then introduce them in a controlled fashion and observed changes in behavior. Obviously, it takes several runs to get an accurate picture; otherwise, you might tend to mistakenly assume that a behavioral change is associated with the food when it might just as well have another cause.
zaay, you do understand that this test is not wholely scientific and might be torn apart my skepticists who could compare said effect to that of Placebo?
I agree with Rockin' Rick. Why do we have to pollute our garbage dumps with so much plastic junk from product packaging?
That completely ignores the psychological effect, which is bound to be significant. Why not just feed the dyes to the kids directly?Buy undyed foods and add coloring to them yourself. You could have a different color of mashed potatoes every night. I'm not sure what varieties of off-the-shelf food coloring are available, though. I know you can buy them in several different forms (liquid, paste, "pure" pigment powders, etc.), but I don't know if you would have access to all of the basic colors used in commercial applications.