Kids prefer boring food
When we dine out with our kids, they usually insist on pasta and French fries rather than the fancy and exciting dishes on the menu. New study looks into children’s willingness to try out unfamiliar food.
Boys are braver than girls when it comes to trying out new things. And teenagers are less likely to challenge their taste buds than young children.
This is one of the main conclusions of a comprehensive Danish project – the ‘Mass Experiment 2012’ – an annual study which this year focused on children’s health.
Almost 20,000 schoolchildren aged 5-19 took part in the study.
In the experiments, the children tasted ‘exotic’ food such as freeze-dried raspberries, honey-roasted oatmeal and dried lemon verbena.
They were then asked to fill in a questionnaire about their attitudes towards unfamiliar food.
Fear of unfamiliar food
This fear of tasting new food is known in scientific circles as ‘food neophobia’. It’s defined as the fear of tasting new and unfamiliar food, whereas a fussy eater is one who is reluctant to eat food that’s familiar, but which the person just doesn’t like.
”We were a bit surprised to see that boys are more courageous eaters than girls, and that they are keener to try out new and unfamiliar food than the girls, says Helene Hausner, a postdoc at Copenhagen University’s Department of Food Science.
”It also surprised us to see that teenagers were actually more anxious about tasting unfamiliar food than the youngest kids. We had expected the young children to be most reluctant to eat new and different food.”
It’s conceivable that a teenager’s taste experience is affected by hormonal changes, and that could indicate a need for further research in this area, she adds.
“The good news is that the youngest children were keen to try new food. That means a lot for their table manners. We know for example that children need to taste food they don’t like up to ten times before they learn to accept them,” says Hausner.
In the study, 19,382 schoolchildren tasted ‘exotic food’, of which 3,994 reported their food neophobia.
Part of Danish Science Week
The Mass Experiment 2012 was part of the annual Danish Science Week in September.
This year’s Mass Experiment was carried out by researchers from Copenhagen and Aarhus Universities in collaboration with Research Center OPUS and Danish Science Communication.
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Read the Danish version of this article at videnskab.dk
Translated by: Dann Vinther
External links
- About the Mass Experiments
- About the Danish Science Week
- About ‘Danish Science Communication’
- About food neophobia (Wikipedia)