We apologize, but we are currently experiencing issues with flash content on Courses and Info Modules. If you experience issues, please know we are working it and we request that you check back next week.
Title

Infants Develop Early Understanding of Social Nature of Food

Short Description

Infants develop expectations about what people prefer to eat, providing early evidence of the social nature through which humans understand food, according to a new study conducted at the University of Chicago. The study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found infants expect people to share food preferences unless they belong to different social groups. Their understanding changes when it comes to disgust toward a food, with infants expecting such reactions to transcend the boundaries of social groups. Even before infants appear to make smart choices about what substances to ingest, they form nuanced expectations that food preferences are fundamentally linked to social groups and social identity.