Brunstrom Jeffrey M
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Bristol, 8 Woodland Road, BS8 1TN, England, United Kingdom.
Physiol Behav. 2005 May 19;85(1):57-65. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2005.04.004.
There is every indication that most of our flavor preferences and dietary behaviors are learned. Despite this, we know very little about the underlying mechanisms. This paper considers reasons why this might be the case. In addition to considering particular methodological issues and the potential relevance of a 'critical developmental period', emphasis is placed on the need to resolve whether learning results from an implicit or an explicit process. Addressing this issue has important implications for the way that studies should be designed. It also leads to one of two diametrically opposite conclusions. Either behavior is governed by a rather rare form of automatic and involuntary associative learning, or otherwise, it should be regarded as non-automatic and subject to attentional and other constraints associated with most other forms of learning in humans. This latter proposition invites speculation that learning might also be governed by more complex representations (beliefs and attitudes) associated with the foods and flavors that are presented in learning studies. More generally, an analysis of this kind is important because it has the potential to explain differences that might underpin particular aberrant eating habits.
种种迹象表明,我们大多数的口味偏好和饮食行为都是后天习得的。尽管如此,我们对其潜在机制却知之甚少。本文探讨了出现这种情况的原因。除了考虑特定的方法论问题以及“关键发育期”的潜在相关性外,重点还在于需要确定学习是源于隐性过程还是显性过程。解决这个问题对研究设计方式具有重要意义。这也会得出两个截然不同的结论之一。要么行为受一种相当罕见的自动且非自愿的联想学习形式支配,否则,就应将其视为非自动的,并受到与人类大多数其他学习形式相关的注意力及其他限制。后一种观点引发了一种推测,即学习可能也受与学习研究中呈现的食物和味道相关的更复杂表征(信念和态度)的支配。更普遍地说,这种分析很重要,因为它有可能解释可能导致特定异常饮食习惯的差异。