Valerie Duffy, Ph.D.

Professor, Department of Allied Health Sciences University of Connecticut

  • Storrs CT

Professor focused on how variation in taste affects food flavor and food preference, translated to healthier eating to reduce obesity risk.

Contact

University of Connecticut

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Biography

Valerie B. Duffy (PhD, RD) offers a wealth of experience in food, nutrition, and health promotion. The Duffy Lab at the University of Connecticut has two main research interests. First, we attempt to understand variation in taste perception in humans and how this variation influences food flavor, food preference and food consumption. More recently, we study how chemosensory variation influences responses to flavored cigarettes and e-cigarettes as well as bariatric surgery. Our ultimate goal is to understand how taste variation influences our ability to follow a healthy diet and behaviors for the prevention of chronic disease and obesity. Second, we partner with community agencies across the state to promote healthy diets and healthy weights of children and their families, particularly those of economic disadvantage. Through involvement of undergraduate and graduate students, we are investigating the effectiveness of tailored health promotion messages, mhealth, and community-based interventions in primary care and school settings.

Dr. Duffy and her students have numerous publications and presentations at national and international meetings. She has received several awards for excellence in teaching, research and service. Students who have trained with Dr. Duffy are advancing nutrition and health promotion through research, practice or public health leadership. Dr. Duffy has served as major advisor for and completed thirty-four students in their Master’s degree and four students in their Doctoral degrees. She has served as associate advisor for numerous Masters and Doctoral students, and provides research experiences for many undergraduates into her research laboratory each year. She currently serves as major advisor for five Masters students and one Doctoral student.

Areas of Expertise

Community-based Interventions
Flavor
Smell
Nutrition
Food Preference
Taste
Health Promotion
Obesity

Education

University of Connecticut

Ph.D.

Nutritional Sciences

1992

Rush University

M.S.

Human Nutrition

1984

Cornell University

B.S.

Human Ecology

1992

Accomplishments

Associate Fellow

5-year appointment, Pierson College, Yale University, New Haven, CT

Social

Media

Media Appearances

Being A Veggie Hater Could Be Genetic

Medical Daily  online

2019-11-12

Research has found people born with the "bitter gene" are 2.6 times more likely to eat fewer vegetables than people who don't have this gene, according to a new study presented Monday at the annual meeting of the American Heart Association (AHA).

"The person who has that genetic propensity gets more of the sulfur flavor of, say, Brussels sprouts, especially if they've been overcooked," Valerie Duffy, a University of Connecticut professor and an expert in the study of food taste, preference and consumption, said.

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Losses in Smell and Taste Are Common With Age -- and Can Cause Big Trouble

USA Today  

2016-03-06

And that’s just the beginning, he and other experts say: Older adults with impaired senses of smell and taste are at risk for everything from accidentally eating spoiled food to dying in undetected fires and gas leaks. And a loss of pleasure in smelling and tasting food is not a minor problem, they say: it can lead to dangerous weight loss in some frail elders, while leading others to gorge on unhealthy sweet, salty or fatty foods — always “hoping the next bite will taste better,” says Valerie Duffy, a professor of nutritional sciences at the University of Connecticut...

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How Your Taste Buds Can Help You Lose Weight

ABC News  

2015-02-24

"When it comes to taste, each one of us is hardwired differently," says Valerie Duffy, RD, professor of nutritional science at the University of Connecticut.

And emerging research is showing that our flavor preferences may affect our waistlines and health in surprising ways. Check out the fascinating scoop on exactly what’s going on inside your mouth and how to tap your taste buds to dump unwanted pounds...

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Research Grants

Tailored messages for health promotion and obesity prevention using e-health and m-health

Storrs Agricultural Experiment Station

USDA/HATCH

Supporting the development of healthy eating in young toddlers through a coordinated, clear and consistent communications program (the 4 C’s) in one low-income Connecticut community.

Child Health and Development Institute of Connecticut

Co-Principal Investigator

Articles

Associations between Weight Loss, Food Likes, Dietary Behaviors, and Chemosensory Function in Bariatric Surgery: A Case-Control Analysis in Women

Nutrients

Hubert PA, Papasavas P, Stone A, Swede H, Huedo-Medina TB, Tishler D, Duffy VB

2019

We tested the hypothesis that successful weight loss post-bariatric surgery would be associated with healthier chemosensory function, food likes, and dietary behaviors than either unsuccessful weight loss or pre-surgery morbid obesity. In a case-control design, pre-surgical women with morbid obesity (n = 49) were compared with those 1-year post-surgery (24 Roux-en-Y Bypass, 24 Sleeve Gastrectomy) and defined by excess or percent weight loss as successful/unsuccessful.

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Modeling Associations between Chemosensation, Liking for Fats and Sweets, Dietary Behaviors and Body Mass Index in Chronic Smokers

Nutrients

Larsen BA, Litt MD, Huedo-Medina TB, Duffy VB

2019

Chronic smokers have a greater risk for altered chemosensation, unhealthy dietary patterns, and excessive adiposity. In an observational study of chronic smokers, we modeled relationships between chemosensation, fat/carbohydrate liking, smoking-associated dietary behaviors, and body mass index (BMI).

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Heightened olfactory dysfunction and oral irritation among chronic smokers and heightened propylthiouracil (PROP) bitterness among menthol smokers

Physiol Behav

Duffy VB, Glennon S-G, Larsen BA, Rawal S, Oncken C, Litt MD.

2019

Chronic cigarette smoking may influence chemosensory function, which in turn, may affect cigarette usage. Because menthol in cigarettes can attenuate nicotine bitterness, choice of menthol/nonmenthol cigarettes may be influenced by ability to perceive bitterness. We examined chemosensory function of chronic smokers, hypothesizing they would show altered function in comparison to non-smokers and by menthol cigarette preference.

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