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Children judge others based on their food choices. | LitMetric

Children judge others based on their food choices.

J Exp Child Psychol

Department of Psychology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA.

Published: March 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Children show a strong preference for conventional foods and those who choose them, suggesting they consider these choices as normative.
  • Experiments revealed that children associate conventional food choices with cultural familiarity, often viewing native speakers as more likely to prefer conventional foods than foreign speakers.
  • Despite recognizing cultural differences, children negatively judge individuals who choose unconventional foods, indicating a biased view against those who deviate from accepted eating practices.

Article Abstract

Individuals and cultures share some commonalities in food preferences, yet cuisines also differ widely across social groups. Eating is a highly social phenomenon; however, little is known about the judgments children make about other people's food choices. Do children view conventional food choices as normative and consequently negatively evaluate people who make unconventional food choices? In five experiments, 5-year-old children were shown people who ate conventional and unconventional foods, including typical food items paired in unconventional ways. In Experiment 1, children preferred conventional foods and conventional food eaters. Experiment 2 suggested a link between expectations of conventionality and native/foreign status; children in the United States thought that English speakers were relatively more likely to choose conventional foods than French speakers. Yet, children in Experiments 3 and 4 judged people who ate unconventional foods as negatively as they judged people who ate canonical disgust elicitors and nonfoods, even when considering people from a foreign culture. Children in Experiment 5 were more likely to assign conventional foods to cultural ingroup members than to cultural outgroup members; nonetheless, they thought that no one was likely to eat the nonconventional items. These results demonstrate that children make normative judgments about other people's food choices and negatively evaluate people across groups who deviate from conventional eating practices.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6311432PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2018.10.009DOI Listing

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