Spence Charles, Reinoso-Carvalho Felipe, Velasco Carlos, Wang Qian Janice
1Department of Experimental Psychology, Anna Watts Building, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX2 6GG, UK.
2School of Management, Los Andes University, Bogotá, Colombia.
Multisens Res. 2019 Jan 1;32(4-5):275-318. doi: 10.1163/22134808-20191403.
Food product-extrinsic sounds (i.e., those auditory stimuli that are not linked directly to a food or beverage product, or its packaging) have been shown to exert a significant influence over various aspects of food perception and consumer behaviour, often operating outside of conscious awareness. In this review, we summarise the latest evidence concerning the various ways in which what we hear can influence what we taste. According to one line of empirical research, background noise interferes with tasting, due to attentional distraction. A separate body of marketing-relevant research demonstrates that music can be used to bias consumers' food perception, judgments, and purchasing/consumption behaviour in various ways. Some of these effects appear to be driven by the arousal elicited by loud music as well as the entrainment of people's behaviour to the musical beat. However, semantic priming effects linked to the type and style of music are also relevant. Another route by which music influences food perception comes from the observation that our liking/preference for the music that we happen to be listening to carries over to influence our hedonic judgments of what we are tasting. A final route by which hearing influences tasting relates to the emerging field of 'sonic seasoning'. A developing body of research now demonstrates that people often rate tasting experiences differently when listening to soundtracks that have been designed to be (or are chosen because they are) congruent with specific flavour experiences (e.g., when compared to when listening to other soundtracks, or else when tasting in silence). Taken together, such results lead to the growing realization that the crossmodal influences of music and noise on food perception and consumer behaviour may have some important if, as yet, unrecognized implications for public health.
食品外部声音(即那些与食品或饮料产品及其包装没有直接关联的听觉刺激)已被证明会对食品感知和消费者行为的各个方面产生重大影响,而且这种影响通常在意识之外发挥作用。在本综述中,我们总结了有关我们所听到的内容能够影响我们所品尝味道的各种方式的最新证据。根据一项实证研究,背景噪音会干扰味觉,这是由于注意力分散所致。另一项与营销相关的研究表明,音乐可以以多种方式影响消费者对食品的感知、判断以及购买/消费行为。其中一些影响似乎是由响亮音乐引发的唤醒作用以及人们行为与音乐节奏的同步所驱动的。然而,与音乐类型和风格相关的语义启动效应也很重要。音乐影响食品感知的另一条途径源于这样的观察:我们对正在收听的音乐的喜好/偏好会延伸至影响我们对所品尝食物的享乐主义判断。听觉影响味觉的最后一条途径与新兴的“声音调味”领域有关。现在越来越多的研究表明,当人们听那些被设计成(或因其与特定风味体验相符而被选择)与特定风味体验相符的配乐时(例如,与听其他配乐相比,或者与在安静环境中品尝相比),他们对味觉体验的评价往往会有所不同。综上所述,这些结果让人们越来越意识到,音乐和噪音对食品感知和消费者行为的跨模态影响可能对公共卫生有着一些重要的(尽管尚未被认识到的)影响。