Renaming Fruits And Vegetables With Catchy Names Convinces Kids To Eat Them, Study Says

Kids More Likely To Eat Vegetables With Goofy Names, Study Says
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Renaming fruits and vegetables with catchy, attractive monikers could more easily convince children to eat them, according to a new study.

Researchers at Cornell University's Food and Brand Lab tested the likelihood that students at five ethnically and economically diverse schools schools would eat items dubbed "X-Ray Vision Carrots," "Power Punch Broccoli," "Tiny Tasty Tree Tops" and "Silly Dilly Green Beans" over the same foods labeled "Food of the Day."

The results were overwhelming -- for instance, in one school 66 percent of the carrots labeled "X-Ray Vision Carrots" were eaten up versus the 32 percent when they were labeled "Food of the Day."

In a release, the study's lead author Brian Wansink explained that the finding could provide a cheap solution to improving kids' diets:

"These results demonstrate that using attractive names for healthy foods increases kid's selection and consumption of these foods and that an attractive name intervention is robust, effective and scalable at little or no cost," Wansink said. "This research also confirms that using attractive names to make foods sound more appealing works on individuals across all age levels."

The Food and Brand Lab web site offers more details, explaining that researchers also examined two schools over the course of two months -- but only one in which attractive names were introduced in the second month:

Of the 1,552 students involved 47.8% attended the treatment school. The results were outstanding: vegetable purchases went up by 99% in the treatment school, while in the other school vegetable sales declined by 16%!

The Cornell findings aren't the first to suggest simple tweaks could add up to big changes in kids' diets. Earlier this year, a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that students served with trays that pictured carrots and green beans in its compartments were more likely to select those foods for lunch.

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Before You Go

Food Pyramids Of The World
UK's Eatwell Plate(01 of10)
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What the?! You mean, the British already beat us to the plate thing, and theirs is way more involved that our basic MyPlate? We're not sure about the Eatwell branding (sounds like it's a nutritional offshoot of J. Crew), but it's split up into five sections that pretty much cover all the bases. Then again, it kind of crams a lot of information onto one little plate, so maybe the new MyPlate is better for its simplicity. Take that, UK. U-S-A! U-S-A!More About British Food:5 Great British Beers
China's Food Pagoda(02 of10)
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China's food pagoda advocates a varied diet that's high in sweet potatoes, legumes, and soy beans. Salt and oil compose the top tier of the pagoda and represent foods to consume in limited quantities. It may not get a lot of points for comprehensive nutritional advice, but at least the Chinese picked a culturally appropriate design for their chart!More About Chinese Food:Can American Chinese food be healthy?
France's Food Stairs(03 of10)
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Leave it to the French to be different. Then again, they do know their food, and of course their wine. This is also one of the few charts that encourages physical activity, which should be a no-brainer. Recommended daily servings are above the food in each step, and the magnifying glass on the side displays miniature small servings of sweets, salt, oil, and sodas.More About French Food:Talking veggies and grains with Alain Ducasse
Germany's 3D Pyramid(04 of10)
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Germany took the basic idea of the food pyramid and added as many features to it as possible. It'd probably take a hardcore IBM mainframe to explain this but here goes: Each side of the pyramid represents a different food group. On the bottom of the pyramid is a circle that shows the appropriate proportion of each food group, with water in the center. If that wasn't enough, there is a traffic light-inspired scale on the left of each of the four sides, which indicates the nutritional value of the foods in that side. At least we think that's what's going on here.More About German Food:5 black IPAs to drink now
Greece's Food Pyramid(05 of10)
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Greece's food pyramid represents the typical food groups -- proteins, vegetables, fruits, grains, and dairy -- and adds culturally specific guidelines for olive oil and wine consumption. They top it all off with a "Mediterranean Diet" tag that'd make this a perfect candidate for the next US fad diet!More About Greek Food:Leg of lamb recipe
Hungary's Food House(06 of10)
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Hungary's nutritional chart looks kind of like it was the result of a 5th grade class contest to design Hungary's next nutritional chart. Apparently, the Hungarian government issued a lot of text along with its symbol, but text is so 20th century. Still, you gotta love that there's a chimney made from sugar and fat.More About Hungarian Food:Wine pairings
Japan's Spinning Top(07 of10)
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The Japanese cover a lot of ground with its action-packed spinning top. The whirling symbol covers the gamut of eating and exercise advice, and even allows for snacks, "confections," and drinks (in a side note). Greater consumption of grains, vegetables, and fish are encouraged over fruits and dairy. Kinda what you'd expect from Japan.More About Japanese Food:Bordeaux à la Japonaise
Poland's Food Pyramid(08 of10)
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The Polish food pyramid takes a thoroughly photographic approach to encourage a large consumption of grains followed by vegetables, fruit, dairy, and finally small amounts of fish and meat. We're guessing this is because either there's not a lot of fish and meat available in Poland; the pyramid was designed when the Soviets still ran the place; or the illustration was commissioned by the Polish Grain Foundation.More About Polish Food:Talking with Giselle Wellman
Slovenia's Food Pyramid(09 of10)
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Slovenia gets out vote for the trippiest food pyramid of all -- a 3D map to eating right and living well. Nice job, Slovenia! Send us your digits and maybe we'll come by if we can figure out where you are.More About Slovenia:The wines of Friuli
Spain's Food Pyramid(10 of10)
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Spain may be all cocky on the tennis court thanks to Rafael Nadal, but they're totally hedging their bets on the food chart. Spain's got a food plate as well as a pyramid. Like the Greeks, the Spanish also encourage its citizens to practically guzzle olive oil. They do get bonus points for spotlighting exercise and water intake though. So, um, good for them.More About Spanish Food:Spain's gin and tonic bars

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