Logo del repository
  1. Home
 
Opzioni

We are what we eat: How food is represented in our mind/brain

Rumiati, R. I.
•
Foroni, F.
2016
  • journal article

Periodico
PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW
Abstract
Despite the essential role of food in our lives, we have little understanding of the way our knowledge about food is organized in the brain. At birth, human infants exhibit very few food preferences, and do not yet know much about what is edible and what is not. A multisensory learning development will eventually turn young infants into omnivore adults, for whom deciding what to eat becomes an effortful task. Recognizing food constitutes an essential step in this decisional process. In this paper we examine how concepts about food are represented in the human brain. More specifically, we first analyze how brain-damaged patients recognize natural and manufactured food, and then examine these patterns in the light of the sensory-functional hypothesis and the domain-specific hypothesis. Secondly, we discuss how concepts of food are represented depending on whether we embrace the embodied view or the disembodied view. We conclude that research on food recognition and on the organization of knowledge about food must also take into account some aspects specific to food category, the relevance of which has not been sufficiently recognized and investigated to date.
DOI
10.3758/s13423-015-0908-2
WOS
WOS:000381177500009
Archivio
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11767/88418
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-84974849274
https://link.springer.com/article/10.3758%2Fs13423-015-0908-2
Diritti
metadata only access
Soggetti
  • Alzheimer dementia

  • Category-specific def...

  • Conceptual knowledge

  • Food perception

  • Fronto-temporal demen...

  • Object recognition

  • Semantic memory

  • Alzheimer Disease

  • Comprehension

  • Feeding Behavior

  • Frontotemporal Dement...

  • Human

  • Knowledge

  • Odorant

  • Olfactory Perception

  • Pattern Recognition, ...

  • Brain

  • Concept Formation

  • Food

  • Experimental and Cogn...

  • Developmental and Edu...

  • Arts and Humanities (...

  • Settore M-PSI/02 - Ps...

Scopus© citazioni
42
Data di acquisizione
Jun 14, 2022
Vedi dettagli
Web of Science© citazioni
46
Data di acquisizione
Mar 15, 2024
Visualizzazioni
5
Data di acquisizione
Apr 19, 2024
Vedi dettagli
google-scholar
Get Involved!
  • Source Code
  • Documentation
  • Slack Channel
Make it your own

DSpace-CRIS can be extensively configured to meet your needs. Decide which information need to be collected and available with fine-grained security. Start updating the theme to match your nstitution's web identity.

Need professional help?

The original creators of DSpace-CRIS at 4Science can take your project to the next level, get in touch!

Realizzato con Software DSpace-CRIS - Estensione mantenuta e ottimizzata da 4Science

  • Impostazioni dei cookie
  • Informativa sulla privacy
  • Accordo con l'utente finale
  • Invia il tuo Feedback