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. 2019 Jan:71:96-105.
doi: 10.1016/j.foodqual.2018.06.008. Epub 2018 Jun 26.

Vegetarians' and omnivores' affective and physiological responses to images of food

Affiliations

Vegetarians' and omnivores' affective and physiological responses to images of food

Eric C Anderson et al. Food Qual Prefer. 2019 Jan.

Abstract

Many vegetarians report that meat is unpleasant, but little else is known about their affective responses to meat and non-meat foods. Here we explored affective responses to food images in vegetarians and omnivores and tested the hypothesis that vegetarians have global differences in affective processing (e.g., increased disgust sensitivity). We presented pictures of different food items and recorded participants' affective experience while we recorded peripheral physiology. We found that vegetarians' self-reported experience of meat meal images was less pleasant than omnivores', but that other food images were equally pleasant across the two groups. Moreover, vegetarians and omnivores had strikingly similar physiological responses to all food images - including meat meals. We interpret these results from a psychological constructionist perspective, which posits that individuals conceptualize changes in their bodily states in ways that match their beliefs, such that increased sympathetic nervous system activity may be conceptualized as an experience of excitement about a delicious meat meal for omnivores but as an experience of displeasure for a vegetarian who believes meat is cruel, wasteful, impure, or unhealthy. This interpretation is consistent with emerging neuroscience evidence that the brain constructs experience by predicting and making meaning of internal sensations based on past experience and knowledge.

Keywords: Affect; Food; Meat; Psychophysiology; Vegetarian.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Picture ratings. Error bars represent standard errors. * represent p < .05 for t-test comparing vegetarians to omnivores. Ratings were made using 100-point slider scales. For food pictures, participants were asked: ‘how appetizing is this?’ (from 0 = ‘not appetizing’ to 1 = ‘very appetizing’). For pictures of animals on farms, participants were asked: ‘how much is this animal suffering?’ (from 0 = ‘not at all’ to 1 = ‘very much’).
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Affect and emotion ratings. Error bars represent standard errors. * represent p < .05 for t-test comparing vegetarians to omnivores. Ratings were made using 100-point slider scales. The original valence ratings on a −1 to +1 scale were transformed to be on a 0–1 scale to match the other ratings for depiction in this figure only. Valence varied from 0=negative to 1=positive; arousal varied from 0=deactivated to 1=activated. Participants also reported the degree to which they felt: disgusted, guilty, angry, sad, happy, and hungry (from 0=‘not at all’ to 1=‘extremely’).
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
Physiological responses over time. Stimulus onset was at 0 s, offset at 6 s.

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