According to a study at the International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA) in Trieste and recently published in the journal Scientific Reports,
vision is the main sense humans use to guide food choices. The
researchers suggest that to evaluate calorie intake, humans rely on a
"color code."
"According to some theories, our visual system
evolved to easily identify particularly nutritious berries, fruits and
vegetables from jungle foliage," says Raffaella Rumiati, SISSA
neuroscientist and coordinator of the new study. The human vision system
is trichromatic: in the retina, there are three classes of
photoreceptors (cones) tuned preferentially to three different bands of
the visible spectrum. This implies that we can see a large number of
colors (more than monochromatic and dichromatic animals, less than those
with four, even five types of photoreceptor). "We are particularly
efficient at distinguishing red from green," says Rumiati. This
sophistication testifies to the fact that we are "visual animals." Other
animals, such as dogs, depend on their sense of smell.
"It is mainly the color of food that guides us, and our experiments
show how," explains Rumiati. "To date, only a few studies have been
focused on the topic."
What do humans look for in food? Nutrition, calorie-dense content,
and high protein. "In natural foods, color is a good predictor of
calories," explains Francesco Foroni, SISSA researcher and first author
of the study. "The redder an unprocessed food is, the more likely it is
to be nutritious, while green foods tend to be low in calories." Our
visual system is clearly adapted to this regularity. "The participants
in our experiments judged foods whose color tended toward red as higher
in calories, while the opposite was true for greens," continues Giulio
Pergola, a researcher at the University of Bari, and one of the authors
of the study. "This is also true for processed, or cooked foods, where
color loses its effectiveness as an indicator of calories."
Actually, the scientific literature shows clearly that cooked foods
are favored over natural foods and the phenomenon has been observed even
in other species besides humans. "Cooked foods are always preferred
because, compared to natural foods, there is more nutrition for the same
quantity," explains Rumiati. "With cooked foods, however, the dominance
of red over green no longer provides reliable information, which might
lead us to believe that the brain would not apply the rule to processed
foods. On the contrary, it does, which hints at the presence of ancient
evolutionary mechanisms from before the introduction of cooking."
Another factor in favor of this hypothesis is the fact that the color
code in the experiments is not active for items other than food: "The
preference for red over green is not observed with non-edible objects,"
says Rumiati. "This means that the color code of the visual system
activates correctly only with food stimuli."
Inner traffic light for eating healthier
The findings, besides increasing knowledge of the visual system,
offer interesting possibilities that could have an impact on public
health: Marketing food, for example, and treating eating disorders.
"Much is being done today to encourage healthier eating," notes Rumiati.
"For example, trying to convince the people to eat foods lower in calories."
Some countries propose bans on certain types of products, such as
carbonated soft drinks and high-fat foods. In some cases, there is a
disclaimer on the packaging, as with cigarettes. Perhaps food color could be used to produce significant results, even if artificial."
SOURCE:
MedicalXpress and Provided by:
International School of Advanced Studies (SISSA)



No comments:
Post a Comment