| Literature DB >> 27513636 |
Laura Miccoli1, Rafael Delgado1, Pedro Guerra1, Francesco Versace2, Sonia Rodríguez-Ruiz1, M Carmen Fernández-Santaella1.
Abstract
Recently, several sets of standardized food pictures have been created, supplying both food images and their subjective evaluations. However, to date only the OLAF (Open Library of Affective Foods), a set of food images and ratings we developed in adolescents, has the specific purpose of studying emotions toward food. Moreover, some researchers have argued that food evaluations are not valid across individuals and groups, unless feelings toward food cues are compared with feelings toward intense experiences unrelated to food, that serve as benchmarks. Therefore the OLAF presented here, comprising a set of original food images and a group of standardized highly emotional pictures, is intended to provide valid between-group judgments in adults. Emotional images (erotica, mutilations, and neutrals from the International Affective Picture System/IAPS) additionally ensure that the affective ratings are consistent with emotion research. The OLAF depicts high-calorie sweet and savory foods and low-calorie fruits and vegetables, portraying foods within natural scenes matching the IAPS features. An adult sample evaluated both food and affective pictures in terms of pleasure, arousal, dominance, and food craving, following standardized affective rating procedures. The affective ratings for the emotional pictures corroborated previous findings, thus confirming the reliability of evaluations for the food images. Among the OLAF images, high-calorie sweet and savory foods elicited the greatest pleasure, although they elicited, as expected, less arousal than erotica. The observed patterns were consistent with research on emotions and confirmed the reliability of OLAF evaluations. The OLAF and affective pictures constitute a sound methodology to investigate emotions toward food within a wider motivational framework. The OLAF is freely accessible at digibug.ugr.es.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27513636 PMCID: PMC4981440 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0158991
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic characteristics of the sample.
| Participants’ characteristics | N (%) or Mean (SD) | Overall N |
|---|---|---|
| 20.9 (4.1) | 424 | |
| Females | 269 (65.44%) | 424 |
| Males | 155 (36.56%) | |
| “Yes, I am hungry”. | 105 (24.76%) | 424 |
| “No, I am not hungry”. | 319 (75.24%) | |
| BMI < = 18 | 30 (7.08%) | 424 |
| 18> BMI < = 25 | 311 (73.35%) | |
| 25> BMI <30 | 68 (16.04%) | |
| BMI > = 30 | 15 (3.54%) | |
| 14.5 (4.5) | 416 | |
| 46.8 (4.6) | 416 | |
| 110.7 (25.7) | 416 |
Due to computer failure, 8 participants (2 males) could not complete the questionnaires after evaluating the pictures and are therefore not included in the table.
Fig 1"Affective space."
Each dot represents an IAPS or an OLAF image as a function of its mean pleasure (y axis) and arousal (x axis) ratings.
Fig 2SAM ratings across IAPS and OLAF picture categories for pleasure (2a), arousal (2b), dominance (2c), and food cravings (2d).
Erotica, neutral objects, and mutilations prompted the typical patterns in the dimensions of pleasure, arousal, and dominance. For foods, pleasure and arousal jointly provided the more reliable description of the emotional impact of specific food categories, distinguishing more clearly than the other dimensions between sweet and savory high-calorie foods and low-calorie fruits and vegetables. On the contrary, as in our previous work [17], food cravings were less capable of pinpointing the emotional impact of different food categories.