The acquisition of taste aversions in humans.

Abstract A written questionnaire or an interview was given to 517 undergraduates concerning their acquisition of illness-induced (taste) aversions to foods and drinks. The subjects reported 415 aversions, with 65% of the subjects reporting at least one aversion. The aversions were more likely to be reported as having been formed through forward rather than simultaneous or backward conditioning, and long-delay learning was frequent. The aversions usually formed to the taste of the foods, rather than the appearance or other aspects of the foods. Extinction appeared more effective in decreasing the aversions than did forgetting. The illness responsible for the aversion's forming was usually attributed to the subsequently aversive food, but for 21% of the reported aversions subjects were sure that something else had caused their illness. Aversions were more likely to have formed to relatively less familiar and less preferred foods. Aversions were also more likely to form between the ages of 13 and 20. Generalization of the aversions to similar foods occurred in 29% of the cases. Approximately one fourth of the aversions were to alcoholic beverages. Finally, instances of aversions forming without food or drink consumption and instances of observational learning were reported. The data were quite similar to laboratory taste aversion data collected using other species and can help in optimizing taste aversion treatments of eating and drinking disorders. Taste aversions among humans are frequent and strong.

[1]  G. Wilson,et al.  Human classical aversion conditioning: nausea versus electric shock in the reduction of target beverage consumption. , 1977, Behaviour research and therapy.

[2]  J. Lorden,et al.  Response suppression to odors paired with toxicosis , 1970 .

[3]  D. Smith,et al.  Role of LiCl and environmental stimuli on generalized learned aversion to NaCl in the rat. , 1970, The American journal of physiology.

[4]  John Garcia,et al.  Behavioral Regulation of the Milieu Interne in Man and Rat , 1974, Science.

[5]  M. Seligman,et al.  Biological boundaries of learning. , 1972 .

[6]  N. Kretchmer Lactose and lactase. , 1972, Scientific American.

[7]  S. Revusky,et al.  Chemical aversion treatment of alcoholism: lithium as the aversive agent. , 1978, Behaviour research and therapy.

[8]  I. Bernstein,et al.  Tumor anorexia: a learned food aversion? , 1980, Science.

[9]  N. Mackintosh The psychology of animal learning , 1974 .

[10]  I. Bernstein Learned taste aversions in children receiving chemotherapy. , 1978, Science.

[11]  F. Etscorn Effects of a preferred vs a nonpreferred CS in the establishment of a taste aversion , 1973 .

[12]  M. Seligman On the generality of the laws of learning , 1970 .

[13]  M. Domjan,et al.  Contribution of ingestive behaviors to taste-aversion learning in the rat. , 1972, Journal of comparative and physiological psychology.

[14]  A. Stunkard,et al.  Taste aversions in man. , 1974, The American journal of psychiatry.

[15]  A. Logue Taste aversion and the generality of the laws of learning. , 1979 .

[16]  S. Revusky Some laboratory paradigms for chemical aversion treatment of alcoholism , 1973 .

[17]  F. W. Grote,et al.  Deprivation level affects extinction of a conditioned taste aversion , 1973 .

[18]  A. Wiens,et al.  Pharmacological aversive counterconditioning to alcohol in a private hospital; one-year follow-up. , 1976, Journal of studies on alcohol.

[19]  A. Logue Visual cues for illness-induced aversions in the pigeon. , 1980, Behavioral and neural biology.

[20]  C. P. Richter EXPERIMENTALLY PRODUCED BEHAVIOR REACTIONS TO FOOD POISONING IN WILD AND DOMESTICATED RATS , 1953, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[21]  R. Bradley,et al.  Intravascular taste in rats as demonstrated by conditioned aversion to sodium saccharin. , 1971, Journal of comparative and physiological psychology.

[22]  N. Braveman Formation of taste aversions in rats following prior exposure to sickness , 1975 .

[23]  I. M. Evans,et al.  Subjective estimates of shock probability following classical aversion conditioning with visual and gustatory conditioned stimuli. , 1977, Behaviour research and therapy.

[24]  C. S. Mellor,et al.  Taste aversions to alcoholic beverages conditioned by motion sickness. , 1978, The American journal of psychiatry.

[25]  R. Elkins Conditioned flavor aversions to familiar tap water in rats: an adjustment with implications for aversion therapy treatment of alcoholism and obesity. , 1974, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[26]  R. Zajonc Attitudinal effects of mere exposure. , 1968 .

[27]  C J Busch,et al.  The effectiveness of electric shock and foul odor as unconditioned stimuli in classical aversive conditioning. , 1977, Behaviour research and therapy.

[28]  R. B. Lockard Reflections on the fall of comparative psychology: Is there a message for us all? , 1971 .

[29]  P. A. Kral,et al.  Illness-Induced Aversions in Rat and Quail: Relative Salience of Visual and Gustatory Cues , 1971, Science.

[30]  B. T. Lett Taste potentiates color-sickness associations in pigeons and quail , 1980 .

[31]  John Garcia,et al.  Relation of cue to consequence in avoidance learning , 1966 .

[32]  P. Rozin,et al.  Specific hungers and poison avoidance as adaptive specializations of learning. , 1971, Psychological review.

[33]  W. Davidson Studies of aversive conditioning for alcoholics: a critical review of theory and research methodology. , 1974, Psychological bulletin.

[34]  Mottin Jl Drug-induced attenuation of alcohol consumption. A review and evaluation of claimed, potential or current therapies. , 1973 .

[35]  R. A. Koelling,et al.  Conditioned aversion to saccharin resulting from exposure to gamma radiation. , 1955, Science.

[36]  Conditioned Reflex Therapy of Alcoholic Addiction: Specificity of Conditioning Against Chronic Alcoholism. , 1940, California and western medicine.

[37]  L. Parker,et al.  Rat data which suggest alcoholic beverages should be swallowed during chemical aversion therapy, not just tasted. , 1976, Behaviour research and therapy.

[38]  T. Baker,et al.  Taste aversion therapy with alcoholics: techniques and evidence of a conditioned response. , 1979, Behaviour research and therapy.

[39]  I. M. Evans,et al.  The effectiveness of visual and gustatory conditioned stimuli in human classical aversive conditioning with electric shock. , 1974, Behaviour research and therapy.

[40]  J. Kalat Taste salience depends on novelty, not concentration, in taste-aversion learning in the rat. , 1974, Journal of comparative and physiological psychology.

[41]  S. A. Barnett,et al.  The Rat: A Study in Behavior. , 1977 .

[42]  S. Revusky,et al.  Learning as a General Process with an Emphasis on Data from Feeding Experiments , 1977 .

[43]  G. Davison,et al.  Aversion techniques in behavior therapy: some theoretical and metatheoretical considerations. , 1969, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.