Tasting with Feelings: Socioeconomic Differences in Children's Emotional and Sensory Description of Vegetables

用情感品尝:儿童对蔬菜的情感和感官描述中的社会经济差异

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Abstract

Vegetable consumption in childhood remains below recommendations worldwide, particularly in disadvantaged socioeconomic groups. Building on prior work showing no socioeconomic status (SES) differences in children's liking of familiar vegetables, this study examined whether their sensory and emotional descriptions vary by SES and how these relate to liking beyond hedonic ratings. A total of 363 Chilean fourth graders (9-10 years) from five SES groups evaluated eight vegetables at school. For each sample, children rated overall liking (7-point facial hedonic scale) and completed two CATA (Check-All-That-Apply) tasks: a child-derived sensory list (13 terms) and a validated emoji-based emotion list (33 items). Data were analyzed using Cochran's Q tests, correspondence analyses, and mean-impact analyses. The use and diversity of sensory and emotional descriptors differed significantly between socioeconomic groups (p < 0.05): children from higher SES levels employed a broader and more differentiated vocabulary, while those from lower SES backgrounds used fewer significant terms. Across the sample, juicy, fresh, and mild flavors increased liking, whereas strong aroma decreased it (p < 0.05); positive emojis increased liking, whereas negative and neutral ones had no effect. These findings reveal that perceptual and affective representations are socially patterned, underscoring the need to foster sensory-affective literacy in lower-SES contexts.

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