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Taste test
In: Soldier: the British Army magazine, Band 53, Heft 11, S. 21
ISSN: 0038-1004
budget belt; taste
In: Capitalism, nature, socialism: CNS ; a journal of socialist ecology, Band 24, Heft 4, S. 122-122
ISSN: 1045-5752
Taste and Democracy
In: The spokesman: incorporating END papers and the peace register, Heft 123, S. 71-72
ISSN: 0262-7922, 1367-7748
A SOUR TASTE
In: Middle East international: MEI, Band 622, S. 15
ISSN: 0047-7249
Tastes like war: a memoir
"Grace M. Cho grew up in a small, rural American town as the daughter of a white American merchant marine and the Korean bar hostess he met abroad. When Grace was fifteen, her Korean mother experienced the onset of schizophrenia, a condition that would continue for the rest of her life. Part food memoir, part sociological investigation, TASTES LIKE WAR is a hybrid text about a daughter's search through intimate and global history to understand herself and the cultural roots of her mother's condition"--
Exogenous preferences and endogenous tastes or tastes as an object of preference
In: Wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Diskussionspapiere
In: Volkswirtschaftliche Reihe 177 = V-177-97
THE LEARNING OF TASTES
In: Public Opinion Quarterly, Band 24, Heft 4, S. 621-631
Soc Sci'ts have made broad-guage studies of changes in & functions of consumer taste, but a close study of change in specific tastes, or of how a fad becomes a style or fashion has not been made. In a pioneer experiment Maslow engaged 15 S's in tasks for 2-hours each day on 10 successive days, in a familiar setting which in the last few sessions was changed periodically according to the S's preferences. Results showed that familiarity with items created liking for some but not for others. In a later study by Krugman of the effect of listening to swing & classical music when initial familiarity with the 2 types differ, it is shown that when familiarity leads to liking of items of a category, a combination of familiarity & liking can produce liking for the category: moreover, liking for the new is related to the number of exposures. In a more recent study Hartley more closely examined the relationship between familiarity & liking for items & its generalization to categories of items; types of categories were also included in the design to determine diff's in the probability of item to category generalization. 23 S's rated each of 10 paintings - oriental, modern, portrait, floral & landscape in type - on a 5-point scale of familiarity & then on 5-point scale of liking. 5 times in the following 4 weeks the S's were asked to study 5 other paintings - one for each category - & to rate them for clarity. After these familiarization exposures the original test paintings were re-rated for familiarity & liking. Before & after ratings were compared & familiarity with items was found to create familiarity with the category: however, this might or might not lead to liking for the category depending on whether psychol'al room for increased familiarity exists (orientals), on the relationship between familiarity & liking for individual items (florals), on the popularity of the category (moderns), & possibly on other factors not measured. C. M. Coughenour.