Tag: taste

  • Unborn Babies React to the Foods Their Mothers Consume

    Unborn Babies React to the Foods Their Mothers Consume

    Even in the womb, unborn offspring respond to taste cues, learning what their mother consumes via the amniotic fluid. Recently, scientists have used ultrasonography to directly see this response for the first time. Babies seemed to smile when they tried the sweet carrots, but their mouths scrunched up when they smelled the bitter-tart kale. The smell of kale causes the fetus (in the picture above) to put up a defensive face.

    The unborn child’s sense of taste develops before its other senses, including hearing and sight. In the eighth week of pregnancy, the first taste receptors appear, and by the time the baby is 15 weeks along, it is able to taste the amniotic fluid it is ingesting. By this time, the infant has picked up on the mother’s eating habits. Numerous studies with infants provide evidence that these first tastes significantly influence what kids want to eat as they grow up.

    Vegetable Smackdown: Carrots vs. Kale

    Now, researchers led by Beyza Ustun of Durham University are utilizing high-resolution 4D ultrasound pictures to show how a fetus reacts to different tastes in the amniotic fluid. These photographs provide the first clear glimpse into the unborn child’s reaction to various flavors. In their research, for the first time, they were able to see these responses.

    One hundred pregnant women consumed a capsule of a test flavor on an empty stomach at 32 and 36 weeks of pregnancy. Each capsule included either 400 milligrams of sweet carrot powder, 400 milligrams of tart and bitter kale powder, or 400 milligrams of a neutral-tasting control material. In order to prevent her reaction from influencing her child, the mother was unable to tell which flavor she was receiving while swallowing. The researchers started documenting the baby’s responses through ultrasonography after the capsule had made its way through the stomach.

    Unborn Babies Expressed Their Emotions Clearly

    After consuming amniotic fluid, this unborn kid smiles because it responds favourably to the delicious carrot powder that the mother had previously consumed.
    After consuming amniotic fluid, this unborn kid smiles because it responds favourably to the delicious carrot powder that the mother had previously consumed. (Image: “Fetal Taste Preferences Study (FETAP)/ Durham University)

    Indeed, fetuses’ facial expressions were seen within 30 minutes after the mothers ingested the aroma capsules. In this little time frame, the aroma compounds had made their way from the small intestine into the circulation and then through the placenta into the amniotic fluid. The unborn babies’ mostly neutral facial expressions were altered in a distinctive manner depending on the exposed aroma.

    When their mother had ingested the delicious carrot powder, the offspring would open their mouths wide, as if smiling, or pucker their lips, as if sucking. The expression was different when the pregnant women were exposed to the bitter taste of kale, as their unborn children’s responses included squeezing their lips together and/or rising their upper lips. According to the research group, their faces mirrored the defensive emotions of a newborn child.

    Watching the babies’ faces light up as they smelled the sweetness of carrots or the earthiness of kale, and then sharing that moment with their moms, was a genuinely unforgettable experience, according to the team.

    Perception of Taste in the Womb Has a Long-Lasting Effect

    These findings provide conclusive evidence that fetuses can detect the aroma of their mothers’ foods while still in the womb. Scientists discovered advanced fetal perception and its capacity to discriminate between distinct taste cues from the mother’s diet.

    Prenatal exposure to a variety of tastes helps shape a child’s food preferences. According to scientists, the potential long-term effects of these early sensory experiences are significant. This is because a mother’s diet influences her child’s food preferences from a young age via early exposure to tastes. Scientists now want to understand if the habituation effect dampens these initially adverse responses. (Psychological Science, 2022; doi: 10.1177/09567976221105460)

  • How Can One Learn to Like an Aversive Taste?

    How Can One Learn to Like an Aversive Taste?

    How is it possible to accustom ourselves to enjoy a flavor that previously had a repulsive taste? There is a widespread consensus among coffee consumers that coffee has an unpleasant flavor, especially when first sipped. Despite this, they identify themselves as coffee enthusiasts. Then they will tell you, “You just have to get accustomed to the taste.” “You learn to enjoy the taste,” even if it’s something unpleasant like a bitter alcoholic beverage, a hot dish, or the smell of cigarettes. But how does it even work? How can we overcome our dislike for flavors that are unpleasant?

    Humans have the most bitter taste receptors, with around 25 distinct ones identified. Sweets, on the other hand, only have one receptor. Frogs have roughly 50 bitter receptors, coelacanth fish have about 70, while penguins only feel salty and sour flavors.

    A defensive purpose

    To begin, the ability to detect bitter flavors serves a defensive purpose. Poisonous or inedible plants are often bitter, which almost immediately discourages humans from consuming them. As a result of this, this protective reflex is still very potent in children, who tend to put a lot of items in their mouths as they investigate their surroundings. Despite this, there are a lot of individuals who really like things that make other people grimace. Coffee, for example, has a taste that is at first revolting, but most people grow to appreciate its flavor after giving it some time to grow on them.

    It is about experience and time

    For one thing, it’s all a question of becoming used to an unpleasant taste; the more often we are exposed to it, the less it affects us after the first few times we experience it. This is mostly because the first warning becomes less effective over time, assuming that the sour flavor does not result in unfavorable experiences. If you felt queasy after drinking just a little bit of coffee, you probably won’t ever get accustomed to the taste of coffee.

    Positive reinforcement is what matters

    However, the concept known as positive reinforcement is the most significant factor in determining behavior. The mere absence of a bad experience is insufficient to make the flavor desirable on its own. On the other hand, if an occurrence is followed by a beneficial result, then the response to the occurrence will supersede the unpleasant warning signal. Caffeine, which is found in coffee, for example, is what causes this energizing effect. This reinforcement may also happen when the activity is done with other people, like when you have coffee and cake with friends or family.

    How it works?

    To put it another way, our brain is capable of learning two different things. To begin, the flavor isn’t all that horrible. Second, the flavor has pleasant after effects on the person. The initial aversion is gradually transformed into something else entirely in the end.