Research  Vegetarians’ disgust at eating meat match feelings on eating human flesh or faeces

#1
C C Offline
https://sites.exeter.ac.uk/gsi/some-meat...d-by-meat/

PRESS RELEASE: Many vegetarians who reject meat feel disgust which closely matches the aversion others feel to the idea of eating human flesh, faeces or dog meat, new research has found.

A study led by the University of Exeter set out to investigate whether there is a difference in the psychological mechanisms by which people reject meat compared to vegetables.

In an online study involving 300 people (mostly vegetarians), researchers found that people who reject vegetables they dislike do so because they feel ‘distaste’ - a simple aversion to taste, texture, or smell of a food. In contrast, when people dislike and reject meat that would be considered appetising by omnivores (such as roast chicken or beef steak), they feel the more complex emotion disgust, in a similar way that meat-eaters were disgusted by the idea of eating human meat, faeces, or dog meat.

Professor Natalia Lawrence, of the University of Exeter said: “This is the most robust evidence to date that we reject meat and vegetables that we find repellent based on different underlying processes. Obviously finding meat disgusting can help people avoid eating it, which has health and environmental benefits. Other research we've conducted suggests that these feelings of disgust may develop when people deliberately reduce or avoid eating meat, such as during Veganuary ”

The study, published in Appetite, recruited 252 people who reject meat and 57 omnivores who eat meat. Researchers tested responses to images of 11 different substances (palatable meat; vegetables which are commonly disliked, such olives, sprouts, raw aubergine, and beetroot. Participants were asked several questions about how eating each of the foods would make them feel. Each question was linked to either disgust (e.g. ‘I would dislike any dish which contained even the tiniest amount of this food, even if I could not taste, smell, feel, or see it.’) or distaste (e.g. ’I would dislike the taste, smell, or texture of this food.’) which allowed the researchers to make a distinction between what people felt (disgust or distaste) when they rejected different foods.

To compare reactions, the meat-eating participants were also shown images of substances which everyone considers disgusting to eat: human flesh, dog meat and faeces. The team recorded 557 rejections of meat (up to three rejections from 252 people), and 670 rejections of vegetables (up to 2 rejections each from 309 people). Where participants said they would not eat the item pictured, they completed questions to investigate the grounds for  rejection. Consistently, people rejected vegetables they did not like based on distaste, and rejected meat and disgust elicitors in a strikingly similar disgust pattern.

Lead author Dr Elisa Becker, who conducted the work at the University of Exeter and has since moved to Oxford University, said: “Meat eaters responded to the idea of eating these truly disgusting substances like faeces in the same way that vegetarians responded to images of meat that they didn’t want to eat, and this was very different from the way they responded to vegetables they rejected. Although we may think we’re rejecting a food simply because we don’t want to eat it, we showed that the basis for this rejection is quite different – and we think that’s evolved to protect us from pathogens that can lie undetected in meat.”

The paper is titled ‘Disgust and Distaste – Differential mechanisms for the rejection of plant- and animal-source foods’, and is published in Appetite.
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#2
stryder Offline
(May 13, 2025 06:20 PM)C C Wrote: https://sites.exeter.ac.uk/gsi/some-meat...d-by-meat/

PRESS RELEASE: Many vegetarians who reject meat feel disgust which closely matches the aversion others feel to the idea of eating human flesh, faeces or dog meat, new research has found.

A study led by the University of Exeter set out to investigate whether there is a difference in the psychological mechanisms by which people reject meat compared to vegetables.

In an online study involving 300 people (mostly vegetarians), researchers found that people who reject vegetables they dislike do so because they feel ‘distaste’ - a simple aversion to taste, texture, or smell of a food. In contrast, when people dislike and reject meat that would be considered appetising by omnivores (such as roast chicken or beef steak), they feel the more complex emotion disgust, in a similar way that meat-eaters were disgusted by the idea of eating human meat, faeces, or dog meat.

Professor Natalia Lawrence, of the University of Exeter said: “This is the most robust evidence to date that we reject meat and vegetables that we find repellent based on different underlying processes. Obviously finding meat disgusting can help people avoid eating it, which has health and environmental benefits. Other research we've conducted suggests that these feelings of disgust may develop when people deliberately reduce or avoid eating meat, such as during Veganuary ”

The study, published in Appetite, recruited 252 people who reject meat and 57 omnivores who eat meat. Researchers tested responses to images of 11 different substances (palatable meat; vegetables which are commonly disliked, such olives, sprouts, raw aubergine, and beetroot. Participants were asked several questions about how eating each of the foods would make them feel. Each question was linked to either disgust (e.g. ‘I would dislike any dish which contained even the tiniest amount of this food, even if I could not taste, smell, feel, or see it.’) or distaste (e.g. ’I would dislike the taste, smell, or texture of this food.’) which allowed the researchers to make a distinction between what people felt (disgust or distaste) when they rejected different foods.

To compare reactions, the meat-eating participants were also shown images of substances which everyone considers disgusting to eat: human flesh, dog meat and faeces. The team recorded 557 rejections of meat (up to three rejections from 252 people), and 670 rejections of vegetables (up to 2 rejections each from 309 people). Where participants said they would not eat the item pictured, they completed questions to investigate the grounds for  rejection. Consistently, people rejected vegetables they did not like based on distaste, and rejected meat and disgust elicitors in a strikingly similar disgust pattern.

Lead author Dr Elisa Becker, who conducted the work at the University of Exeter and has since moved to Oxford University, said: “Meat eaters responded to the idea of eating these truly disgusting substances like faeces in the same way that vegetarians responded to images of meat that they didn’t want to eat, and this was very different from the way they responded to vegetables they rejected. Although we may think we’re rejecting a food simply because we don’t want to eat it, we showed that the basis for this rejection is quite different – and we think that’s evolved to protect us from pathogens that can lie undetected in meat.”

The paper is titled ‘Disgust and Distaste – Differential mechanisms for the rejection of plant- and animal-source foods’, and is published in Appetite.

There is something I concluded that this doesn't delve into.

When I was about four years of age, I ended up having to take a course of antibiotics. Antibiotics for the most part aren't suggested to be given to children as it can cause bacteria die-off in the intestinal tract which can cause a danger to which bacteria becomes dominant.

It's possible that such a die off occurred and the bacteria effected was the one that produces vitamin B12 from eating meat, fish, egg or dairy produce.

That change would of lead to an alteration not just to the intestinal tract, but also enzymes that aid the stomach to break down B12. If the stomach felt "iffy" from no longer functioning correctly, it would of likely led to disgust in regards to certain "food" types. So overtime there would of likely been a greater enforcement to not eat the foods that caused such disgust, thus enforcing disgust should it ever be tried in the future.

Finding something on my plate that doesn't belong there (which has happened a few times) has made be nauseous for days after, from both the psychology as well as how my stomach/intestine reacts.

That being said, salad that isn't washed with clean water can cause just as much of a problem (if not worse with E.Coli)
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#3
Magical Realist Offline
What amazes me about culinary disgust is how subject it is to one's experience. There are so many cultures where eating various organs and glands of animals is totally enjoyed. I myself react to that with disgust. And yet because I was raised on eating beef liver and chicken livers/gizzards I love those organs. My mom and I loved them so much we would crave them. Yet many are disgusted by this just as I am with other organs. Go figure!
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