August 21, 2018 by Molly Birnbaum, Brown University
Rachel Herz, an adjunct assistant professor in Brown’s Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, arrives at an East Greenwich, Rhode Island, café feeling stressed. She’d lost a document when her computer crashed and she isn’t sure how to retrieve it. “If I were an emotional eater, I’d be running to get a huge slice of cheesecake,” she says with a laugh.
We’re not eating, in fact. We’re just catching up over a coffee—Herz was my professor at Brown—to discuss her book “Why You Eat What You Eat,” published last year by Norton. (Disclosure: I blurbed it.) Yet if we were eating, Herz notes, we would not be in a good environment: the music’s too loud, the café too dark, and we’re competing with surrounding conversations, plus the hiss of the cappuccino machine. “We’re so bombarded,” she says.
But these stimuli—sights, sounds, smells, emotions—have a huge, often unnoticed, influence on how we experience the world. Particularly on food, how we taste it, and how it makes us feel. And that is exactly where her new book focuses: at that nexus between appetite and psychology. In its pages, she unpacks how (and why) all of our senses influence our experience of food and our motivations to eat. She investigates how our minds and our environment change our perception of flavor. And she also tackles the reverse: how our experience of food and eating changes our own physiology, mood, and behavior.
A researcher herself, Herz set out to analyze decades of research done by scientists around the world on these subjects in order to empower us. “I hope that with this book I’m giving readers the knowledge to have a greater understanding of—and greater control over—food,” says Herz, “rather than feel like food is controlling them.”
Raised in Montreal by two professor parents, Herz has written two other popular science books, “The Scent of Desire” (Harper Collins, 2007), on the psychology of smell, and “That’s Disgusting” (Norton, 2012), on the psychology of repulsion. Yet all the while, she says, food was on her mind. So she finally embarked on “Why You Eat What You Eat.” What follow are some of the book’s fascinating facts.
Your bad mood makes things taste sour
Your perception of sourness is not constant—or, a lemon will not always taste so tart. What changes? Your mood. A 2015 study, published in the journal Appetite and conducted at Cornell University, surveyed Cornell hockey fans, asking how happy (or sad) they were after their team won (or lost), then had them taste a lemon-lime sorbet. The happiest fans rated the dessert as tasting sweeter and less sour. Why? When happy, you produce more of the feel-good neurotransmitter serotonin; when stressed, you produce the hormone noradrenaline. Serotonin will increase your perception of sweet, while noradrenaline increases that of sour.
Sweets may make you, well, sweeter
In a 2012 study out of North Dakota State University and Gettysburg College, scientists found that eating sweets and being nicer were highly correlated. First, they confirmed that this is something many people believe: “Strangers who were described as liking honey were rated as friendlier, more cooperative, and more compassionate than strangers who were described as liking grapefruit, lemons, pretzels, or hot peppers—that is, bitter, sour, salty, and spicy tastes,” says Herz. Another study found that after just a brief taste of sweet chocolate (opposed to a cracker or no food at all), people said that they felt more agreeable. “Eating the taste of sweet is something highly hedonically rewarding,” explains Herz. “It turns on the bliss points in the brain.” If you’ve got a stressful meeting, she suggests, bring donuts for the group. It’ll put everyone in the right mood.
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