Watching someone dislike vegetables may make you dislike them too


Watching others visibly dislike vegetables might make onlookers dislike them too, a new study as found.

The research suggests observing facial expressions of others eating raw broccoli can influence whether or not we like it. Humans learn which behaviour pays off, and which does not, from watching others.

Based on this, people may draw conclusions about how to act or eat, and in the case of the latter, people may use each other as guides to determine what and how much to eat. Experts say this is called social modelling and is one of the most powerful social influences on eating behaviour.

In a new study, researchers investigated whether seeing what faces others make while eating raw broccoli influenced young women’s liking and desire to eat the raw green themselves.

Lead author Dr Katie Edwards, a researcher at the Aston University School of Psychology, said: “We show that watching others eating a raw vegetable with a negative facial expression reduces adult women’s liking of that vegetable, but not their desire to eat it. This highlights the power of observing food dislike on adults’ eating behaviour.”

In the study more than 200 women aged 18-30 watched a video containing clips of different unfamiliar adults consuming raw broccoli. While eating, the models displayed positive (smiling), neutral, or negative (disgust-like) facial expressions.

Previous research suggests behaviour is more likely to be imitated if positive consequences are observed, while the reverse is true if negative outcomes are witnessed. However, in the new study this correlation was only partially observed.

The researchers found that exposure to models eating broccoli with negative facial expressions resulted in a greater reduction in liking ratings, but there was not change in desire to eat the food.

“Watching others eating a raw vegetable with a positive facial expression did not increase adults’ vegetable liking or eating desire,” Dr Edwards explained.

Scientists suggest one possible reason for the findings may be that avoiding any food – irrespective of whether it is commonly liked or disliked – that appears disgusting can protect us from eating something that tastes bad or is harmful. Another reason may be that smiling while eating is perceived as an untypical display of liking a certain food.

Dr Edwards said: “This might imply that watching someone eating a raw vegetable with positive facial expressions does not seem an effective strategy for increasing adults’ vegetable consumption.”

Although the study looked at adults, the researchers suggest the findings might also apply to children. Dr Edwards said: “For example, if a child sees their parent showing disgust whilst eating vegetables, this could have negative consequences on children’s vegetable acceptance.”

In the present study, published in Frontiers in Psychology, the women also watched short video clips, rather than watching people eat in front of them. However, the researchers say in the future, an important focus will be to examine the effect of watching live food enjoyment on eating behaviour.

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