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成人和儿童在家庭用餐时使用爱、喜欢、不喜欢和讨厌。作为食物偏好谈话的主观类别评估。

Adult and child use of love, like, don't like and hate during family mealtimes. Subjective category assessments as food preference talk.

机构信息

School of Psychological Sciences and Health, University of Strathclyde, Graham Hills Building, 40 George Street, Glasgow, G1 1QE.

出版信息

Appetite. 2014 Sep;80:7-15. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2014.04.024. Epub 2014 Apr 30.

Abstract

Food preference is now a ubiquitous concept in eating research, and closely associated with actual consumption, particularly in relation to children's food preferences. Research in this area is beginning to reveal the effects of parent-child interaction on eating practices though relatively little attention has been paid to the discursive and lexical processes involved. Food preferences are typically associated with the terms 'likes' and 'dislikes' in food preference research. By contrast, adults and children typically use the terms 'love', 'like', 'don't like' and 'hate' to construct and manage food preferences in everyday meal conversations. A corpus of 270 video- and audio-recorded English and Scottish family mealtimes, involving children aged 1-17 years, was searched and analysed for any and all occurrences of subjective category assessments (SCAs; e.g., 'I like X'), featuring the terms 'love', 'like', 'don't like' and 'hate'. Discursive psychology was used to analyse the transcripts and recordings, and illustrated the disparity between adult and child use of SCAs and food preference talk. Within the data set, parents typically made claims about what their children like, and in doing so claimed epistemic primacy over their children's food preferences. Children, by contrast, typically made claims about their own 'don't likes' and likes, and these were frequently countered by their parents or treated as inappropriate claims. Implications for how parents and researchers might reorient to the food preferences lexicon are discussed.

摘要

食物偏好现在是饮食研究中一个无处不在的概念,与实际消费密切相关,尤其是在儿童食物偏好方面。尽管相对较少关注涉及的话语和词汇过程,但该领域的研究开始揭示亲子互动对饮食实践的影响。在食物偏好研究中,食物偏好通常与“喜欢”和“不喜欢”等术语相关联。相比之下,成年人和儿童通常使用“爱”、“喜欢”、“不喜欢”和“讨厌”来构建和管理日常用餐对话中的食物偏好。研究人员搜索并分析了一个包含 270 段视频和音频记录的英国家庭和苏格兰家庭用餐的语料库,涉及 1 至 17 岁的儿童,寻找并分析所有出现的主观类别评估(SCAs;例如,“我喜欢 X”),这些评估都使用了“爱”、“喜欢”、“不喜欢”和“讨厌”等术语。话语心理学被用来分析这些记录和文本,展示了成年人和儿童在使用 SCA 和食物偏好语言方面的差异。在这个数据集中,父母通常会对他们的孩子喜欢什么做出断言,从而声称对孩子的食物偏好具有认知上的优先权。相比之下,孩子通常会对自己的“不喜欢”和喜欢做出断言,而这些断言往往会遭到父母的反驳,或者被视为不适当的断言。讨论了父母和研究人员如何重新定位食物偏好词汇的问题。

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