Hidden Brain - Hungry, Hungry Hippocampus
Episode Date: November 12, 2019Anyone who's tried (and failed) to follow a diet knows that food is more than fuel. This week, we revisit our 2018 episode about the psychology behind what we eat, what we spit out, and when we come b...ack for more.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Hi, everyone.
Hello, thank you.
I'm great.
Sarah and David Risa recently bought a place outside of Washington, DC.
They sound excited because this is the first time they're hosting both their families.
We are making today a vegetable frittata with tomato, basil and goat cheese.
We've got home fries, We've got regular waffles.
Sara and David wanted to start a new tradition. Cook brunch with ingredients from their home garden.
The home fries have rose married from our garden and the potato has basil from our garden.
This is Sara's way of going back to her family's roots. She remembers her mother doing the very same
thing. I remember growing up my mom had a garden and she would always come back with like these tiny little tomatoes and be like
I provided for my family look family. I grew this and we're like, yeah, that's the smallest tomato ever
But there's something about being able to grow stuff and being able to
Give it to people that you love that's pretty exciting. So yeah, my grandmother would always say that this is Sarah's brothers
Ah, the sharing food is important, but I'd say the most important part
is being around the table.
But food was the lurch to get everyone out.
Yeah, exactly.
We kept us there.
Yes, exactly.
Food brought us together,
but it was the company and the conversation.
Today on Hidden Brain,
the profound role that food plays in our lives. Food is not just nutrition that goes in your mouth,
or even pleasant sensations that go with it.
It connects to your whole life.
We look at the culture and psychology that determine what we eat,
what we spit out, and when we come back for more.
Paul Rosen has been studying the psychology and culture of food for more than 40 years. He works at the University of Pennsylvania.
Early in his career, Paul found himself pondering a question that few of us might think to ask,
why do so many people across the world enjoy
the hot, stinging pain of chili peppers?
This question took Paul to a small village in Mexico where chili peppers were as common
as salt and pepper in the United States.
They don't think their food tastes good without it, and the little kids don't like it.
So something happens somewhere between two and five years of age. At the
meals where everybody adult is eating the hot pepper and the older children are and they're
all enjoying it and a little kid is thinking it's terrible. And after a while some magic
occurs and the little kids like it. So I thought, well, we had there a number of possible accounts.
Some accounts involve something fundamentally biological.
And presumably the biological explanation would be if you start eating it long enough,
you're eventually just going to like it for biological reasons.
Yes, that's right.
The brain compensates for all sorts of things.
We adapt to things.
This is a case of more than adaptation, where you're turning something that's negative
into something positive.
I mean, to me, that's an amazing thing that we can start with something that's innately
negative and make it really positive.
So I said, let's take a look at the animals in the village, because the dogs and the pigs
eat Mexican food.
They're eating tacos and hot sauce and beans and all of that's love.
So I went around the village and I first asked people,
do you have any dogs or pigs that like hot pepper?
And they said, what are you crazy?
I said, well, yeah, I mean they eat it and they said,
that's ridiculous.
I said, would you mind if I give the dogs a little piece of cracker
with some hot sauce on it and without and see what they choose?
So they said, go ahead. And so I did
would go around the village with pigs and dogs. I put a one cracker in front of them with hot pepper
sauce and another without and I'd see what they did. And it turns out that none of them ate the hot
pepper first. They all ate the one without pepper because they're hungry, but their first choice
was the one without hot pepper. So that I couldn't find an animal in the village
that did what everyone over five years old in humans did,
which was the gobbler stuff out on preferred.
So that suggested to me that it seems to be uniquely human.
And so this is not just a question of people getting used to it
and getting to like it, because the dogs and pigs are eating the garbage.
The garbage is laced with chili peppers. If that was the case, that would be true for the animals as well.
So what was happening in the humans, in the human brain, if you will, that allowed five-year-old
children to fall in love with chili peppers and kept their canine cousins from liking it?
Well, that's indeed exactly the question. We don't know how this happens, but we do know that
where it happens is at the meals where
the kids are eating with their parents and their older siblings, and they keep eating it
because the social pressure to eat it.
Now the animals keep eating it too because they're hungry, so it can't be just that they
keep eating it.
So it's really, to me, a miracle.
And what I realized is that it's a miracle that takes place in humans all over the world,
not just about hot pepper.
It's also about liking coffee, which is bitter, and people don't like it originally, and they like it.
And it goes outside the food domain.
People like to go on roller coasters.
Now, a roller coaster is a very negative experience the first time you have it, right?
You think you're crashing to death.
And your heart is pounding and yet people pay to do this.
Can you imagine a dog paying to go on a roller coaster?
I mean, you know, it just won't happen.
So we found that there's a whole range of things in which humans enjoy what is originally
negative and they come to enjoy it as positive.
This includes the fatigue of running, it includes said movies,
it includes being afraid in horror movies.
This seems to be only humans.
So our thought, and it's only a thought, is that what humans are enjoying is the very fact that their body thinks that something is bad,
but they know it's okay.
We call it benign masochism.
You have the special ability to appreciate the fact that they know that something that
their body is saying is bad is actually good. And we have evidence for that. So, for example,
for chili pepper, the favorite degree of hotness is just below the level of unbearable
pain. They're pushing as far as they can to get their
body to really screen, get this out of here and yet know that it's okay. So it seems to be a very
general feature of humans which we tapped into by asking water a couple of billion people
like hot pepper. So in some ways the theory is that you start out not liking it and then social
pressure if you will convinces you to try it and then you try it often enough that your body
learns to adapt to it a little bit, but then eventually you start to like it for actually
a slightly different reason.
You're no longer liking it just because of the pure pressure or the social interactions
you're liking it because it gives you a sense that you're coming close to the edge of
something thrilling.
Is that the argument?
Yes, there's something thrilling that is not threatening.
Right.
So, for example, if something is threatening, you don't get to like it.
Like, people don't get to like serious pain.
Right.
It has to have something of the sense of it's not really threatening.
And it even becomes funny.
So, in the case of disgust, people don't like disgusting things, right?
But they make exceptions.
They eat smelly cheese, and they come to like that smell
in the context of the cheese, even though their body
is saying, get this out of your mouth, it stinks.
You once performed an experiment on yourself.
You were with your wife, I believe,
at a Korean restaurant in New York City.
And you didn't interview with NPR back in 2015,
where you told the reporter that it was one of the hottest things
you'd ever eaten.
Tell me that story.
Well, my wife at the time was a cookbook writer
and she was very interested in cuisine.
We went to a Korean restaurant in New York
and the people around us, they were ordering some dish
that we didn't recognize.
So we said to the waiter, we would like that.
And he says, you don't want that.
I said, no, no, we said, we really like to try new foods.
He says, you don't want to try that food.
So this went on, and we won, of course.
And he brought this dish, and it was unbearably hot.
And we ate it because we were shamed into eating it
by our own insistence that it was good.
I have another story of a different sort.
It also happened in New York, I had a colleague who had a dog and the dog liked to eat dog
poop.
So they were going to Washington Square Park and with the dog and the dog, we just hunt
out a dog poop and eat it and it was just awful.
You know, they hated it and the dog smelled it.
So they went to a vet and the vet said, why don't you put hot pepper on the dog poop because dogs don't like hot pepper.
So they go into Washington Square, I want you to get this image. Barbers holding the dog on a
leash and our husband goes with a shaker of hot pepper, finds a dog turn and seasons it in front
of everybody with all this hot pepper, okay? And I mean the idea of someone seasoning a dog turn and seasons it in front of everybody with all this hot pepper.
I mean the idea of someone seasoning a dog turn is really pretty good.
And then they let the dog go and the dog ate it.
And did the dog stop eating dog poop?
No no because the dog like dog poop more than it does like the hotness.
You know people will put up with pain to do something they really like, right?
Just as Paul has shown that the sense of taste is shaped by the brain,
he's also done work that shows the same thing for appetite.
In one study, he set a meal down before patients who had amnesia.
The general view in most of the people who work on hunger
is that hunger comes when your
body reserves are low, or maybe your glucose is low, various hormones come out, and you
feel this sensation of hunger and you eat until it disappears.
Now there's some truth in that, of course, but there are many other higher order things.
So for example, the cultural definition of what's a meal is very important.
After you finish the meal and have dessert, you stop eating.
So, to try to show this, we dealt with the two amnesic patients who were totally amnesic.
They didn't remember anything that happened more than 30 seconds ago.
But they were quite intact otherwise.
So, we fed them lunch in a situation where they were in a room without a clock.
And we said lunchtime, and it was lunchtime, and we brought them a favorite lunch of
theirs.
We'd asked them what their lunch was, and they, of course, ate it.
Then we took the plate away.
There were no more signs that they'd eaten.
And ten minutes later, we brought another lunch and said lunchtime, and they all ate it.
Three times each.
The second lunch completely.
Then we took that away, we ate it 10 minutes
and brought a third lunch.
Each of these were full-size lunches.
And most of the time they ate the third lunch,
twice I think one of them said,
I'm getting a little stuffed,
meaning their stomach was really getting full.
But the point was that they're eating,
when you're served a meal,
it looks palatable, you tend to eat it.
I was on a plane once flying to Chicago at a three
in the afternoon, they serve the full lunch.
Now, everyone had eaten lunch already,
but six out of the nine people who I could see,
ate that lunch because it was lunch and it was food
and it looked good, probably wasn't good
if it was airplane food, but they ate it.
So a lot of what we do is we eat
when there's good food around
and when the situation is appropriate.
Now if we had left their first lunch
and they saw the plate in front of them
with the pieces of chicken bone,
they might have realized that I've just eaten.
And when we give people, normal people,
a second meal in the same way I just described,
they don't say I'm not hungry.
They say I just ate.
So it's fascinating because I think what you're saying
really is that memory plays a huge role
in whether we think we're hungry.
Yes, being hungry is only one reason that we eat.
So if you go for a full dinner,
halfway through that dinner, you're not hungry anymore.
But you're still eating the rest of the meal.
That's right.
So a hunger can't institute meals.
The lack of it will probably discourage you
from eating more, but there are other things
that influence you too.
When we come back, one of those things
is the role that culture plays in our experience of food.
We'll also look at how you can serve more memorable meals.
Stay with us.
Some time ago, one of our producers attended a dinner for Ramadan and iftar at an apartment
in Washington Washington DC.
Ramadan is the ninth month of the Islamic calendar and commemorates the first revelation of the Quran to the Prophet Muhammad.
Food plays an important role during Ramadan.
For 30 days, Muslims like Esma Al Barudi fast from sunrise to sunset
as a way to practice self-discipline and to reflect on that connection to their faith.
So not being able to eat all day and then coming and having that meal makes you
grateful for what you have.
By deliberately going without food, Tasnim al-Qaik says, hunger can make people
mindful about the role that food plays in their lives.
The Papa, he narrated, saying that you should fill your stomach with three things.
One third for food, one third for drink, and one third for air.
And so I'm always thinking about that, especially after a long day of fasting,
because it's a natural instinct to just put three thirds full of food
and keeping that in mind, constantly reminding myself to always leave room to properly breathe.
Breaking the fast comes with its own rituals. keeping that in mind, constantly reminding myself to always leave room to properly breathe.
Breaking the fast comes with its own rituals.
So it's a really, I think a communal experience.
You break your fast almost every single night with friends and family and you go to the mosque afterwards.
Many Muslims that iftar dinners aren't just breaking a fast.
They're enacting and reinforcing their sense of identity.
Ramadan illustrates the profound role
that food plays in shaping our cultural behavior
and how culture in turn can shape the way we think of food.
And that's the case for Ahmed Assad.
Food is just like the glue that holds a lot of cultures together.
You know, when I'm like, I'm looking around the room right now
and there are people from probably like seven
or eight different countries.
So it's one of those things that's like you appreciate other cultures and you appreciate I think the oneness of what we are and what all of that stands for as a whole.
Psychologist Paul Rosen has spent many decades examining the interplay between food, identity, and culture.
Food is not just nutrition that goes in your mouth or even pleasant sensations that go with it.
It connects to your whole life and it's really a very important part of performing your culture
and experiencing your culture. When Paul asked people about their favourite meals,
they certainly mentioned eating at great restaurants, But they also talk about meals with friends
and family, like the one we just heard about. Here's a very common answer that's
very short, for a home meal. Every Christmas Eve, my Italian grandfather and
Greek grandmother would cook a meal, consisting of creamy carbonara with bacon
pieces throughout, homemade spinach pie and sausage.
It was always amazing.
Now that's a lovely one, right?
And it's not fancy, but you can see the emotion
and the pleasure of it.
And it's connected, of course, to the pleasure of family,
not just to the pleasure of food.
Yes, it's very social.
Another one, the best meal I've ever had in my life
was when I got out of jail.
Having been in jail for three years and eating prison food was horrible.
When I got out, I got a hardy Frisco burger combo meal.
That was the best burger in fries I've ever had.
Okay, so that's, you know, it's a context.
It's a release from bad eating.
So the contrast is so important there.
Contrast and context can also be important
when it comes to thinking about an individual meal.
Consider the difference between a tapas-style meal
and a meal that's built around one large entree.
In both cases, you can fill up your stomach,
but it turns out these have very different effects on your brain.
As social scientists have found, most of us find it difficult to tell the difference between
the tenth bite and the eleventh bite of the very same food.
There's a whole line of modern decision research, most associated with Daniel Conneman, who
got a Nobel Prize for it, and Amos Torsky showing that, you know, people
are not so rational as you might expect them to be. And one of the features of it is called
duration neglect, which is people don't remember how long an experience is. They just remember
the experience. So if you had a pain for 12 hours or a pain for one hour, two weeks later,
what you remember is the experience of the pain,
not how long it was.
So this applied to food means that if you have the same food,
a lot of the same food, it won't produce a very different
memory from having a little of that same food,
because it's the memory of eating the food.
So this raises a very important question
that Coniman originally brought up, which is,
the distinction between your experience
and your memory for the experience.
Coniman and others have shown,
we've done some work on this too,
that the ending of an experience is particularly important.
So when you remember something,
you're more likely to remember the end of it.
And also, by the way, to some extent,
more likely to remember the beginning of it.
And that would mean if you want to produce the best memory for food, you should put the
best foods at the beginning and the end, whereas most people think the entree is the best,
which is in the middle and is the least remembered.
We had Danny Kahneman on Hidden Brain recently, and of course he talked about the peak and
rule and also about the difference between the experiencing self and the remembering
self. Yes. And one of the implications of this, as you
point out, this difference between experiencing a meal and remembering a meal, is it points
to the difference between people who go to restaurants and order their favorite dish
every time, and people who go to a restaurant and order a new dish every time. How do these
two strategies essentially catering to two different psychological impulses?
Well, that's an issue that we have looked at.
And it's pretty clear, if you're going to order your favorite food, and you know you're going to order that before you go to the restaurant,
there are actually three aspects.
There's your anticipation.
This comes from the economy, the anticipation, the experience, and the memory.
Your anticipation of a meal is going to be higher if you order your
favorite food because you know you're going to have something great, right? Whereas if you can
order something new, it's not even clear what you can imagine because you don't know what it is.
At the meal itself, you're probably going to enjoy your favorite dish more than I knew this
because it's one of their best dishes. You love it. There's a little risk in ordering something
though. But if you order your favorite dish, you're not going to create a new memory.
Whereas if you order a new food, you're going to create a new memory.
We are looking at this, but we don't know yet for sure.
If you're a person who generally values memories, then you're going to try to create more memories
by creating new experiences.
Whereas if you value anticipation and experience more, you will keep doing the same wonderful thing.
So how you value anticipation, memory and experience, affects how you're going to choose what activities you do.
Let's just take an example. Massage. Okay, I like massage. I go once a month, I get a massage.
It's pretty much the same. I can't tell you last month's massage was exactly this.
So I'm going
for the anticipation and the experience, which is very positive. I don't really create much
memory from this. And I do it, and I like it. But it's very different from the way I eat,
where I'm always trying to say, I want to enrich my mental menu listing, my life experience of food.
But people differ on this.
We've been interested in trying to see if people
are consistently different.
We don't know yet.
Think of a seven day Caribbean vacation at a resort.
Almost nothing happens, right?
You're feeling good.
It's sun is good.
You go in the water, it's nice.
But there's no, if people say,
tell me about your vacation, it's going to be a very short
Thing right so there's two kinds of vacations what those that are
Really high on experience and vacations that will give you a lot of experience
But there'll also be some hardship you'll get tired something may not work
Something might be closed when you thought it was open. All kinds of things can happen.
So it won't be a totally positive experience, but it will be a bunch of good memories.
You've thought a lot about the differences between the American attitude toward food and
the French attitude toward food.
And you say that the French are more focused on what happens in the mouth, and Americans
are often more focused by what happens in the bloodstream.
I want to play you a short movie clip that illustrates this idea.
Wow!
If it isn't diner girl, what can I get you guys?
What can I get here that has no sugar, no carbs, and is fat free?
Water!
Water!
Was that the first time I saw that movie?
So that was from the movie A Cinderella Story Paul, and I'm wondering if you can just talk a little bit about this.
The American attitude toward food versus the French attitude toward food.
I go to France to fair them out.
They seem to be enjoying their food more than we were.
And interestingly enough, they're marginally healthier than we are.
I mean, it's not a big difference, but they live a little longer,
and they have less heart disease.
And yet they eat a diet that's higher in animal fat than we do.
It's okay if we're worrying about food and the consequence of that is that we're going to live longer.
But we seem to be worrying about food and not living longer.
So that seems like a bad exchange.
So we started a study of how French and Americans differ in the way they eat.
And it's basically got two parts to it.
One is how they think about food, and the other is how their food world is set up.
The French think about food as an oral experience.
They think about eating as something that is giving them pleasure.
They don't tend to think about what's going into their bloodstream, how much sugar is
in their animal fat.
So they're getting more pleasure out of food
because they're not worrying about it.
So for example, if we ask French,
when you think of heavy cream,
do you think of whipped or unhealthy?
They will say usually whipped,
and Americans will say unhealthy.
Now it's the same thing,
but they're thinking about it as an experience,
and we're thinking about it more as a health event.
And in some ways, that actually might be a good thing, right? Because presumably, when
you take more pleasure in food, you're focused on it, you're not necessarily just focused
on getting stuff in your mouth or focusing on nutrition. The French, for example, seem
to pay more attention to portion control than Americans, except that I don't know if they're
thinking about this as control. They're thinking about this as in the enjoyment of food, and once
I'm done enjoying this bite, I'm done with it. Well, they eat more slowly, first of all. So,
they have more mouth experience because they don't swallow as quickly. They savor the food. So,
I mean, if you have a chocolate bar, you can bolt it down in a couple of minutes so you can make a 10 or 15-minute
experience out of it.
And they're more inclined to the latter.
We actually were able to measure how in McDonald's in Paris, how long people sat, and ate
compared to the McDonald's in the United States.
Okay?
And we made sure they were French people in McDonald's.
They were talking French.
The French people sitting in McDonald's sit there for longer than the American people
sitting in McDonald's.
So they're eating more slowly, they're talking more, you know, they're not just bolting
down food.
Food is not fuel.
Americans often, not always, treat food as fuel.
Whereas the French think about it not as a fueling,
but as an event and experience.
Now, in the food world, the big difference
between the French and Americans is portion size.
French traditionally serve smaller portions.
If you look at a French cookbook,
the amount of meat for four people per person
is less than an American cookbook.
In McDonald's and France, the portions are smaller.
Now, if you remember our discussion of the fact that you eat what's in front of you, if
it's pleasant, the amnesic basins, the French put less food in front of you, and so they're
eating less and enjoying it more. And that seems to me to be a good formula. Now, they have
other features of it. The French meal is a much more elaborate event.
People don't get up, especially at home. They don't get up in the middle of the meal and just leave
the table. Everybody eats the same thing. So it's a social event. So I would say the French deal
with food well in the face of the modern world where there's so much good food around that we can
easily stuff ourselves and eat everything under the sun.
They are, they have managed to have a tradition which keeps it moderate and very pleasant.
Paul Rosen has been studying the psychology and culture of food for over 40 years.
He's currently at the University of Pennsylvania. Paul, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
It's been a pleasure.
This episode was produced by Thomas Liu and edited by Tara Boyle. Our team includes Jenny Schmidt, Parth Shah, Raina Cohen, and Laura Correll.
Armies are set to march on their stomachs.
So too, it turns turns out our podcast teams are unsung
heroes this week on Marco Matire, Janice McLean and Jeff Dewey's at NPR's cafeteria
soundbites.
On days you hear a pep in my voice, it's probably because of one of Jeff's omelets.
Thank you Marco, Janice and Jeff and all of your colleagues.
I'm Shankar Vidantam and this is NPR.