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                  <mods:namePart>Simas, Tiago</mods:namePart>
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                  <mods:namePart>Ficek, M.</mods:namePart>
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                  <mods:namePart>Díaz Guilera, Albert</mods:namePart>
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                  <mods:namePart>Obrador, P.</mods:namePart>
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                  <mods:namePart>Rodriguez, P. R.</mods:namePart>
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                  <mods:dateIssued encoding="iso8601">2018-02-06T14:59:51Z2018-02-06T14:59:51Z2017-06-022018-02-06T14:59:51Z</mods:dateIssued>
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               <mods:abstract>In this manuscript we propose, analyse, and discuss a possible new principle behind traditional cuisine: the Food-bridging hypothesis and its comparison with the food-pairing hypothesis using the same dataset and graphical models employed in the food-pairing study by Ahn et al. [Scientific Reports,1:196,2011]. The Food-bridging hypothesis assumes that if two ingredients do not share a strong molecular or empirical affinity, they may become affine through a chain of pairwise affinities. That is, in a graphical model as employed by Ahn et al., a chain represents a path that joints the two ingredients, the shortest path represents the strongest pairwise chain of affinities between the two ingredients. Food-pairing and Food-bridging are different hypotheses that may describe possible mechanisms behind the recipes of traditional cuisines. Food-pairing intensifies flavour by mixing ingredients in a recipe with similar chemical compounds, and food-bridging smoothes contrast between ingredients. Both food-pairing and food-bridging are observed in traditional cuisines, as shown in this work. We observed four classes of cuisines according to food-pairing and food-bridging: (1) East Asian cuisines, at one extreme, tend to avoid food-pairing as well as food-bridging; and (4) Latin American cuisines, at the other extreme, follow both principles. For the two middle classes: (2) Southeastern Asian cuisines, avoid food-pairing and follow food-bridging; and (3) Western cuisines, follow food-pairing and avoid food-bridging.</mods:abstract>
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               <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">cc-by (c) Simas, T. et al., 2017 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess</mods:accessCondition>
               <mods:subject>
                  <mods:topic>Xarxes complexes (Física)</mods:topic>
               </mods:subject>
               <mods:subject>
                  <mods:topic>Alimentació</mods:topic>
               </mods:subject>
               <mods:subject>
                  <mods:topic>Complex networks (Physics)</mods:topic>
               </mods:subject>
               <mods:subject>
                  <mods:topic>Diet</mods:topic>
               </mods:subject>
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                  <mods:title>Food-Bridging: A New Network Construction to Unveil the Principles of Cooking</mods:title>
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