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In addition to being either delicious or revolting, Marmite could be brain food, study says
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In a world bitterly divided into pro- and anti-Marmite factions, lovers of the salty British spread have found support from an unexpected quarter: brain science.
Experiments found that volunteers who ate a daily spoonful of the dark-brown yeast extract seemed to have higher levels of a vital neuron chemical associated with a healthy brain.
The reason could lie in Marmite’s high levels of vitamin B12, the investigators say.
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In a study published on Wednesday, psychologists at the University of York in northern England recruited 28 volunteers and divided them into two groups.
One group ate a teaspoon of Marmite each day for a month; the other ate a daily teaspoon of peanut butter.
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