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iFoon
people digest food differently with music; thus the iPod you use as an eating utensil is an iFoon | |
music might make food pass through a person's body faster, thus creating a wild new opportunity to create a skinnyfying new eating utensil from an iPod
pubmed says
Both classical music and noise altered the regularity of gastric slow waves. The percentage of normal 2-4 cycles/min (cpm) waves was
reduced from 77.9 +/- 4.7% at baseline to 66.9 +/- 5.4% during music
basically your musical eating utensil scans your playlist as a response to the caloric value of the food; maybe it even chipmunks tunes for a few hours if you eat a lot
Alteration of gastric myoelectrical and autonomic activities with audio stimulation in healthy humans
http://www.ncbi.nlm...nel.Pubmed_RVDocSum [beanangel, Jan 17 2008]
chipmunks the verb
http://youtube.com/watch?v=DsSjkfUcJQc [beanangel, Jan 17 2008]
[link]
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//music might make food pass through a
person's body faster, thus creating a wild
new opportunity to create a skinnyfying
new eating utensil from an iPod// Yes, but
then again it might not. |
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Treon, why is that 87% of your ideas of the
form "There was a paper that said this, so
why not do it?". The trick to reading the
literature is to realize that even the
craziest ideas are sometimes wrong. |
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sounds like the next dieting craze. now exactly what type of utensil would the iFoon imitate (i.e., spoon, fork)? |
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i'm likely to buy iFoon sporks. + |
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