Lukasewycz Laura D, Mennella Julie A
Monell Chemical Senses Center, 3500 Market St., Philadelphia, PA, USA 19104.
Food Qual Prefer. 2012 Oct 1;26(1):58-66. doi: 10.1016/j.foodqual.2012.03.007. Epub 2012 Apr 2.
Despite anecdotal reports of children being more sensitive to texture than adults, and of texture being one of the main drivers of food aversions, there is a paucity of scientific knowledge on the influence of texture perception on food choice in children. The primary goals of this study were to assess the use of a modified letter-identification task to study lingual tactile acuity, one aspect of oral sensitivity, in children and to examine age-related differences in sensitivity. The secondary goal was to explore whether lingual tactile acuity and age relate to various measures of food choice and preference. To this end, children 7-10 years old (31 girls, 21 boys) and their mothers were tested using identical procedures. To assess lingual tactile acuity, children and mothers were asked to use the tips of their tongues to identify raised alphabetical letters of varying size (2.5-8.0 mm) on Teflon strips. To relate lingual tactile acuity to food texture preferences, a forced-choice questionnaire assessed preferences for foods similar in flavor but different in texture (e.g., smooth versus crunchy peanut butter). Children were able to complete the lingual acuity task as well as their mothers and took less time to assess each letter stimulus (p < 0.001); however, there were no age-related differences in lingual acuity (p = 0.14). Age, but not lingual acuity, related to food texture preferences: mothers preferred harder foods (p < 0.001) and those containing more particles (p < 0.04) than did children, although children's preferences became more adult-like with increasing age. The availability of a rapid, child-friendly method for assessing oral sensitivity opens up new possibilities of examining differences in oral tactile perceptions across the life span. That food preferences changed with age and were not related to oral sensitivity underscores the fact that factors such as experience, culture and family food practices have a significant impact on children's food texture preferences.
尽管有轶事报道称儿童比成人对食物质地更敏感,且质地是食物厌恶的主要驱动因素之一,但关于质地感知对儿童食物选择的影响,科学知识却很匮乏。本研究的主要目标是评估使用改良的字母识别任务来研究儿童的舌触觉敏锐度(口腔敏感性的一个方面),并检查敏感性的年龄相关差异。次要目标是探讨舌触觉敏锐度和年龄是否与食物选择和偏好的各种指标相关。为此,对7至10岁的儿童(31名女孩,21名男孩)及其母亲采用相同程序进行测试。为了评估舌触觉敏锐度,要求儿童和母亲用舌尖识别特氟龙条上大小不同(2.5 - 8.0毫米)的凸起字母。为了将舌触觉敏锐度与食物质地偏好相关联,一份强制选择问卷评估了对味道相似但质地不同的食物(例如,顺滑与脆花生酱)的偏好。儿童能够像他们的母亲一样完成舌敏锐度任务,并且评估每个字母刺激的时间更短(p < 0.001);然而,舌敏锐度没有年龄相关差异(p = 0.14)。年龄而非舌敏锐度与食物质地偏好相关:母亲比儿童更喜欢更硬的食物(p < 0.001)以及含有更多颗粒的食物(p < 0.04),尽管随着年龄增长儿童的偏好变得更像成年人。一种快速、适合儿童的评估口腔敏感性的方法的出现,为研究整个生命周期内口腔触觉感知的差异开辟了新的可能性。食物偏好随年龄变化且与口腔敏感性无关,这突出了经验、文化和家庭饮食习俗等因素对儿童食物质地偏好有重大影响这一事实。