Department of Anthropology, University of Utah, 84112, Salt Lake City, UT.
Hum Nat. 1994 Sep;5(3):279-91. doi: 10.1007/BF02692155.
It is proposed here that there is a sensitive period in the first two to three years of life during which humans acquire a basic knowledge of what foods are safe to eat. In support of this, it is shown that willingness to eat a wide variety of foods is greatest between the ages of one and two years, and then declines to low levels by age four. These data also show that children who are introduced to solids unusually late have a narrower diet breadth throughout childhood, perhaps because the duration of the sensitive period has been shortened. By reducing the costs associated with learning, a sensitive period for food learning should be adaptive for any omnivore (including early humans) that remains in the same environment throughout its life.
这里提出,人类在生命的头两三年有一个敏感时期,在此期间,他们获得了关于哪些食物可以安全食用的基本知识。为了支持这一观点,研究表明,1 岁到 2 岁之间,人们愿意吃的食物种类最多,然后到 4 岁时,这种意愿会降至较低水平。这些数据还表明,那些固体食物引入时间异常晚的儿童在整个童年时期的饮食范围较窄,这可能是因为敏感时期的持续时间缩短了。通过降低与学习相关的成本,对于任何在其一生中都留在同一环境中的杂食动物(包括早期人类)来说,食物学习的敏感时期应该是适应性的。