Since the beginning of time, food has been a necessity of life. Eventually, it became a pleasurable necessity of life as the Romans would throw private parties where they would entertain a small group of guests and serve a feast full of Roman delicacies. Since then food has become an emotional aspect of our lives. Certain foods, such as cakes and cookies, might create a pleasurable experience for an individual, while other foods, such as vegetables and seafood, might create an unpleasant experience for them. In addition, people might tend to eat a certain type of food or certain amount of food depending on the emotional state that they are in. It is also becoming more apparent in society that people tend to have unhealthy eating behaviors when they are experiencing negative emotions, such as sadness or anger. Despite what one may think, humans have a pretty strong emotional relationship with food. A person’s emotional response to food can vary to many different emotions; some pleasant and some unpleasant. In one part of a study, participants were given a questionnaire to answer questions pertaining to what emotions they experienced in response to food (Desmet & Schifferstein, 2008). The questionnaire was included a total of twenty-two emotions that had an even number of eleven pleasant and eleven unpleasant emotions. In the questionnaire, all twenty-two emotions were judged on the relevance of experiencing each emotion from eating or tasting food. Each emotion was rated on a five-point scale which ranged from one being “never” (never have experienced this emotion from eating or tasting food) to five being “very often” (very often experience this emotion from eating or tasting food) (Desmet & Schifferstein, 2008). As the results fr... ... middle of paper ... ...nstrate how food and emotions are interlinked with one another by showing us that although food can elicit a positive or negative emotional response, emotions can affect an individual’s responses to food and their eating behaviors. And as long as food continues to be a necessity for us to live and survive, we will always have an emotional connection to food. Works Cited Desmet, P.M., & Schifferstein, H.N. (2008). Sources of positive and negative emotions in food experience. Appetite, 50(2–3), 290-301. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2007.08.003. Macht, M. (1999). Characteristics of eating in anger, fear, sadness and joy. Appetite, 33(1), 129–139. http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/appe.1999.0236. Macht, M., & Mueller, J. (2007). Immediate effects of chocolate on experimentally induced mood states. Appetite, 49(3), 667-674. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2007.05.004.
"Emotions and Eating Behavior: Implications for the Current Obesity Epidemic." University of Toronto Quarterly Spring 79.2 (2010): 783-99. Web. Apr. 2014.
I am very tempted to try the new food since it might taste good, but on the other hand it may not taste good and may even give me a stomach-ache or food poisoning. The final decision when trying a new food usually depends on how it looks. In Rozin’s studies, he observed these two emotions in rats. The rats would nibble on the new food and wait to see if it affected them negatively, learning not to eat it if it hurt them. Pollan believed that Rozin’s work on the “omnivoral problem” would explain how animals select food and “adaptations in primates as well as a wide range of otherwise baffling cultural practices in humans” (Pollan 289)....
Eating the pizza instead of the salad seemed like a good idea at the time, but now one is stuck in this sloth like state hours later. It seems letting cravings control what and how to eat is not the best strategy to healthy living. Mary Maxfield, in her article “Food For Thought: Resisting the Moralization of Food” discusses her views on how people should eat. She believes people crave what their bodies need, therefore, people should eat what they crave. Maxfield claims that diet, health, and weight are not correlated with each other, and because of this, people view obesity as unhealthy, thus forcing them to distinguish “right, healthy” foods from the “wrong, unhealthy” choices.
The problem behavior associated with individuals making bad food choices when presented with unhealthy food will need to be observed so that we may understand how to change this behavior as it is unhealthy and harmful to health overall. Are poor choices in different foods causing obesity? Making poor choices when it comes to food is an
Further studies of taste aversion can be beneficial because of the possible applications it may offer, perhaps some techniques in treating such problems as alcoholism (Walker 1995) or to better understand the environment's affect on animal and human behavior.
With every experience that we have with food, a memory is created. Our experiences with food begin when we are infants. The memories can be traumatic or they can be pleasant, but they will affect the way we think, act, and shape our ideas about food in the future. Just like our language, the clothes we wear on a daily basis, our individual customs, and the values and beliefs that we have, food is important in constructing our overall identity too. If the way a person speaks, dresses, and thinks can reveal a lot about who they are as individuals, then doesn't food also define us? Everything that revolves around our food from what we choose to eat and how our food is obtained and prepared to when and how we eat tells us so much about
Today, telling people what to eat seems to be the right thing to do now, huh? And telling people to eat whatever they want is seems to be extremely controversial. You know why I think it’s controversial? Not simply because we live in a culture that’s messed-up, foodwise, but because we, as a culture, seem to take the worse possible opinion of human nature. It should be no surprise to anyone that our society views food as a moral issue. Better yet, a possibly risky moral issue. Not to get too deep into the discussion of ethical and religious views on food, but in my opinion food isn’t moral. It’s not immoral, either. I would say it's morally neutral. Sadly, in today’s society, we live in a time and a place where ice cream is frowned upon. We tend to take the most pessimistic view of humans if they’re seen stuff their face with ice cream. Kass raised a controversial point in chapter 2 of his book, “The Human Form.” In it he gives us what he calls the "gap betwe...
The Institute of Heartmath, (2012), childhood obesity and emotional eating, http://www.heartmath.org/free-services/articles-of-the-heart/childhood-obesity-and-emotional-eating.html [accessed 05 Nov 2013]
Food influences us in many ways. These ways include food as nutrition, how we see nature, in our culture, it is a social good, it is a source of inspiration in an artful way, food is a primordial desire, and food influences our spirituality. Food is a substance that derives from the environment in the form of plants, animals, or water. The primary function of food is to provide nourishment to an organism. It is a basic necessity that all humans want and need in order to live. Food has an intrinsic value separate from its instrumental value to satisfy human needs. Food has a significant impact on a culture. Each society determines what is food, what is acceptable to eat, and when certain things are consumed. Food is the object of hunger
The gustatory system is the system that determines taste senses. Taste is detected by the molecules that enter the mouth, either in liquid or solid form (Goldstein, 2010). Taste can be known as a gatekeeper, which its purpose is to create a connection between the substance’s effect and the taste quality. Most people enjoy sweet and salty compounds that contain nutritive value and are essential for comforting. Not only do sweet compounds produce a satisfying sensation, they also provoke an anticipatory metabolic response that prepares the gastrointestinal system for digesting these foods and cause an automatic acceptance response (Goldstein, 2010).
Many efforts to address emotional eating have emphasized the importance of effective mood regulations skills to enhance one’s ability to tolerate stress or negative mood without using food to cope (Telch, Agras, & Linehan, 2001). Only within the past 20 years has research focused on applying more traditional learning processes to the development and maintenance of emotional eating. The primary difference between these perspectives, as exemplified by the Davidson model, is the de-emphasis of cognitions and motivations for eating (e.g., to escape negative mood) in the learning models, such as the classical conditioning model.
Many people in America, from toddlers to the elderly, have shown numerous signs of bad health. People have the desire to keep on eating due to more, new things being merchandised as “new and improved items” from the producers. For example, nowadays, people are eating pure junk that they find satisfying on the grocery food shelf. As, stated by Michael Pollan, in his article, “Eat Food: Food Defined” he affirmed that “real food is the type of things that our
Such emotions that can cause harm to an individual is depression and sadness. When an individual overconsumes food, the individual may express such emotions that causes harm to their health. Becoming addicted to food can harm the life of an individual as the emotions that are express from overconsuming food can easily affect their daily life. Such experience is normally shown in the life of a teen who loves food but chooses to ignore the consequences that comes along with the
Ramnarace, Cynthia. "Can Food Affect Your Mood?" CNN. Cable News Network, 27 Nov. 2013. Web. 20 Apr. 2014.
In chapter seven, many aspects of emotions and motivation were discussed and analyzed. While learning about these in class, one specific topic stood out to me. This topic was the sensation of hunger. Without food, people can not survive. Recently, however, food has become a controlling factor and has caused the increase in obesity in the human population, specifically the United States. Analyzing what causes the sensations of hunger can help to give possible reasons for the increase in obesity today. I found hunger sensations particularly interesting because it dives deeper into the causes of hunger. The chapter and lecture focused on the concept that hunger is a complex matter that can be caused by many a combination of triggers.