AQA Syllabus focus:
'The role of learning in food preference, including social and cultural influences.'
Food preferences are not fixed at birth. Many likes and dislikes develop through experience, observation, and the norms of the groups people belong to, so eating behavior is strongly shaped by learning and culture.
Learning and food preferences
Learning explanations argue that people come to like particular foods because repeated experiences make those foods familiar, rewarding, and socially meaningful. Preferences therefore develop over time rather than being entirely innate.
Mere exposure and familiarity
A simple way learning affects preference is through repeated exposure. Foods that are seen and tasted often become more familiar, and familiarity usually increases acceptance. This is especially important in childhood, when unfamiliar foods may first be rejected.
Mere exposure effect — the tendency to develop a preference for something simply because it is encountered repeatedly.
Repeated exposure helps explain why children often learn to like foods that are regularly available at home, even if those foods were not liked at first. A single refusal does not mean a permanent dislike; several calm, non-coercive exposures may gradually increase liking.
Associative learning
Food preferences can also be learned through associations. If a food is linked with pleasant experiences, people may come to like it more. For example, a flavor paired with sweet tastes, enjoyable family meals, or celebrations can acquire positive value.
Two broad forms of associative learning are important:

This diagram compares classical conditioning (learning an association between two stimuli) with operant conditioning (learning an association between a behavior and its consequences). It helps students distinguish flavor-based associations (e.g., pairing a taste with a pleasant context) from consequence-based learning (e.g., praise increasing future tasting). Source
Flavor-flavor learning: liking increases when a new flavor is paired with an already liked flavor.
Flavor-nutrient learning: liking increases when a flavor is followed by positive consequences such as energy and satiety.
These processes help explain why high-calorie foods are often strongly preferred. If eating a certain food reliably produces pleasure or satisfaction, the preference is strengthened.
Operant learning
Preferences are also shaped by the consequences of eating. If trying a food is followed by praise, attention, or a reward, the behavior may be repeated. This is a form of operant conditioning, where behavior changes because of its consequences.

This diagram summarizes the core branches of operant conditioning, showing how consequences shape whether a behavior increases (reinforcement) or decreases (punishment). It is useful for mapping food-related examples (e.g., praise after trying vegetables) onto the correct quadrant (positive/negative reinforcement or punishment). Source
However, learning can work negatively as well. Pressure to eat, criticism, or conflict at mealtimes may make a food less appealing. This means that the emotional context of eating matters, not just the food itself.
Social influences on food preferences
Food learning happens in a social world. People learn what to eat, how to eat, and what to avoid by watching others, especially those who are important to them.

This figure contrasts two routes to observational learning: a live model (learning by watching someone demonstrate a behavior in person) and a symbolic model (learning via media). It reinforces how food preferences can be acquired without direct reinforcement, simply by seeing others enjoy—or endorse—a food. Source
Family influence
Parents and caregivers are usually the earliest and strongest social influence on food preference. They affect preferences by:
deciding which foods are available at home
modeling what is normal to eat
encouraging or discouraging certain foods
linking foods with routines, comfort, or reward
Children are more likely to accept foods that they see adults eating regularly. If parents frequently eat fruits and vegetables, children are more likely to view those foods as familiar and acceptable. In contrast, if some foods are rarely offered, children have fewer opportunities to learn to like them.
Observational learning
People do not need direct rewards to learn preferences. They can copy others simply by observing their behavior and its consequences.
Social learning — learning that occurs through observing other people, imitating their behavior, and noticing the rewards or approval they receive.
If a child sees siblings or parents enjoying a food, that food may seem safer and more desirable. This is especially useful for unfamiliar foods, where observing others reduces uncertainty.
Social learning also explains why peer groups become increasingly important with age. Adolescents may change food preferences to fit in with friends, shared routines, or group identities. A teenager may become more interested in energy drinks, fast food, or particular dietary trends because these choices are valued by peers.
Wider social influences
Food preferences can also be shaped by advertising, influencers, and social norms. Repeated exposure to branded foods, along with images linking them to fun, popularity, or status, can create positive learned associations. These messages do not act in isolation, but they can reinforce preferences already supported by family and peer environments.
Cultural influences on food preferences
Culture provides the wider framework within which learning takes place. It helps determine what counts as food, which flavors are desirable, when people eat, and the meanings attached to meals.
Cultural norms and traditions
Different cultures encourage different preferences through long-term exposure and shared practices. Cultural traditions influence:
typical ingredients and cooking methods
acceptable levels of sweetness, bitterness, or spiciness
meal patterns and portion expectations
foods linked to celebration, religion, or identity
As a result, people often prefer the foods they grew up with because these foods are repeatedly experienced in meaningful settings. Cultural learning makes some foods seem normal and attractive, while others may seem strange or unappealing.
Enculturation and identity
From early childhood, people are enculturated, meaning they learn the values and practices of their culture. Food is part of this process. Meals often communicate belonging, family identity, religion, and tradition. Because of this, food preferences are not only about taste; they are also about social meaning.
Cultural background can therefore shape strong preferences for foods associated with home, festivals, or community. These preferences may remain stable even when people move to a different country, although exposure to new foods can gradually modify them.
How learning, social, and cultural factors work together
These influences are closely linked rather than separate. Culture shapes which foods are available and valued. Families pass on those cultural patterns through everyday meals. Peers and media may later strengthen, weaken, or change earlier preferences.
This interaction helps explain why food preferences can change across the lifespan. Repeated exposure, positive modeling, and supportive social settings can increase acceptance of foods, while conflict, lack of exposure, or strong social pressures can limit it. For this reason, food preference is best seen as a learned pattern shaped by experience within social and cultural contexts.
Practice Questions
Outline one way learning can influence food preference. (2 marks)
1 mark for identifying a relevant learning process, such as repeated exposure, associative learning, operant conditioning, or social learning.
1 mark for brief elaboration, for example that repeated exposure increases familiarity and can lead to greater liking of a food.
Explain social and cultural influences on food preference. (6 marks)
Award up to 6 marks for accurate explanation. Credit up to 3 marks for social influences and up to 3 marks for cultural influences.
Possible content:
Parents and caregivers influence food preference through availability, modeling, praise, and meal routines. (1 mark)
Children may imitate the eating behavior of parents, siblings, or peers through observational learning. (1 mark)
Peer groups can shape preferences because individuals may conform to shared eating habits or valued foods. (1 mark)
Culture influences what is seen as normal, acceptable, or desirable to eat. (1 mark)
Cultural traditions shape preferred ingredients, flavors, cooking methods, and meal patterns. (1 mark)
Food preferences may reflect cultural identity, religion, or customs learned through repeated exposure. (1 mark)
FAQ
Context matters. A child may refuse a food at home if mealtimes involve pressure, conflict, or anxiety.
In another setting, the same food may seem more acceptable because:
peers are eating it
the atmosphere is calmer
the child feels less watched
the food is presented differently
This shows that preference is influenced by social cues, not just taste alone.
Yes. Early flavor exposure can begin very early through maternal diet.
Flavors from foods eaten during pregnancy may reach the amniotic fluid, and flavors from the mother's diet can also appear in breast milk. This means infants may become familiar with certain tastes before solid feeding starts.
That early familiarity may make later acceptance easier, especially for commonly eaten family foods.
Celebration foods are often repeated in highly emotional settings, which makes them especially memorable.
They may become liked because they are linked with:
family gatherings
reward and excitement
traditions
feelings of comfort or belonging
This creates strong positive associations, so the preference is partly learned from the event surrounding the food, not only from the flavor itself.
Packaging can shape expectation before the food is even tasted.
Bright colors, characters, logos, and familiar branding can increase attention and create positive associations. If a product is repeatedly linked to fun, popularity, or rewards, people may expect it to taste better and choose it more often.
Over time, those repeated associations can help strengthen preference, especially in children.
Food is closely tied to identity, memory, and belonging. Because of this, cultural preferences can remain strong even when the food environment changes.
Traditional foods may be maintained because they:
connect people to family and community
carry religious or symbolic meaning
provide comfort and familiarity
are used in rituals and celebrations
New preferences can still develop, but older ones often remain important because they serve social and emotional functions as well as nutritional ones.
