
Making veggies cool for kids
Kids won't eat their vegetables? Rename them, scientists say.
In a new study, 186 four-year-olds were given regular carrots and, on
other lunch days, they were given the same vegetables renamed X-ray
Vision Carrots. On the latter days, they ate nearly twice as many.

The study suggests the influence of these names might persist.
Children continued to eat about 50 per cent more carrots even on the
days when they were no longer labelled as anything special. The
research, funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, was presented at
the annual meeting of the School Nutrition Association in Washington,
DC.
"Cool names can make for cool foods," says lead author Brian Wansink
of Cornell University. "Whether it be 'power peas' or 'dinosaur broccoli
trees,' giving a food a fun name makes kids think it will be more fun to
eat. And it seems to keep working - even the next day," Wansink said.
Similar results have been found with adults. A restaurant study
showed that when the Seafood Filet was changed to Succulent Italian
Seafood Filet, sales increased 28 per cent and taste rating increased by
12 per cent. "Same food, but different expectations, and a different
experience," said Wansink, author of "Mindless Eating: Why We Eat More
Than We Think."
The veggie study was conducted in pre-schools, but the researchers
believe the same naming tricks can work with children at home.
"I've been using this with my kids," said researcher Collin Payne,
"Whatever sparks their imagination seems to spark their appetite."
- LiveScience.com. |