[Purpose] Although gum chewing while walking has been reported to increase walking speed
and heart rate, its effect on energy expenditure remains unclear. The purpose of the
present study was to investigate the effects of gum chewing while walking on fat
oxidation, energy expenditure, and different walking parameters. [Participants and
Methods] This randomized crossover study included 10 males and 5 females who walked for
15 min at their own pace while chewing 2 pieces of gum in the gum trial or while eating 2
tablets in the control trial. A wearable metabolic system, heart rate monitor, and
pedometer measured fat oxidation, energy expenditure, heart rate, step count, and walking
distance. Walking speed and stride length were also calculated. [Results] The energy
expenditure, fat oxidation and heart rate were significantly higher during the gum trial
than during the control trial. Significant increases were observed in the step count,
walking distance, and walking speed but not in the stride length. [Conclusion] Our results
suggest that gum chewing affects sympathetic nervous system activity and walking rhythm
with a consequent improvement in the health-related effects of walking, which in turn
helps to maintain weight. These findings may play a role in preventing the gradual
age-related weight gain that predisposes to obesity.
[Purpose] This study examined the effects of gum chewing while walking on physical and
physiological functions. [Subjects and Methods] This study enrolled 46 male and female
participants aged 21–69 years. In the experimental trial, participants walked at natural
paces for 15 minutes while chewing two gum pellets after a 1-hour rest period. In the
control trial, participants walked at natural paces for 15 minutes after ingesting powder
containing the same ingredient, except the gum base, as the chewing gum. Heart rates,
walking distances, walking speeds, steps, and energy expenditure were measured. [Results]
Heart rates during walking and heart rate changes (i.e., from at rest to during walking)
significantly increased during the gum trial compared with the control trial. Walking
distance, walking speed, walking heart rate, and heart rate changes in male participants
and walking heart rate and heart rate changes in female participants were significantly
higher during the gum trial than the control trial. In middle-aged and elderly male
participants aged ≥40 years, walking distance, walking speed, steps, and energy
expenditure significantly increased during the gum trial than the control trial.
[Conclusion] Gum chewing while walking measurably affects physical and physiological
functions.
Abstract. We study n × n random symmetric matrices whose entries above the diagonal are iid random variables each of which takes 1 with probability p and 0 with probability 1 − p, for a given density parameter p = α/n for sufficiently large α. For a given such matrix A, we consider a matrix A that is obtained by removing some rows and corresponding columns with too many value 1 entries. Then for this A , we show that the largest eigenvalue is asymptotically close to α + 1 and its eigenvector is almost parallel to all one vector (1, ..., 1).
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