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Very few children continue to have food neophobia as they become adults.
Food neophobia is particularly common in toddlers and young children.
We must not allow neophobia to slam the door on these possibilities.
A child's risk for developing food neophobia is primarily genetic.
Vegetables seem to be particularly prone to the effects of food neophobia.
In biomedical research, neophobia is often associated with the study of taste.
It develops what is called 'neophobia', or 'fear of the new'.
Psychosocial factors can also increase a child's chances of developing food neophobia.
Someone who fears anything new has a neophobia.
In psychology, neophobia is defined as the persistent and abnormal fear of anything new.
Food neophobia is an important concern in pediatric psychology.
This was followed six months later by Neophobia's Fear of the Future.
There are really picky babies, of course, but expect neophobia from most babies.
Cain describes his son's reaction as neophobia, adding that a fear of new foods is quite common among children.
Neophobia (fear of novelty), tends to vary with age in predictable, but not linear, ways.
In the neophobia test (panel A) the subjects were allowed access to the saline solution for 10 min.
A toddler's natural tendency toward food neophobia, the wholesale rejection of unfamiliar foods, sometimes without even so much as a taste.
In a study done in 2011, food neophobia among international students is also reported to be the cause of reluctance to accept changes to food.
Wilson's views on neophobia are mostly negative, believing that it is the reason human culture and ideas do not advance as quickly as our technology.
Cats may reject novel flavors (a response termed neophobia) and learn quickly to avoid foods that have tasted unpleasant in the past.
The behavioural deficits caused include neophobia, a larger response to new stimulus, locomotor hyperactivity, and increased aggression.
This erratic neophobia is by no means restricted to those blessed and sometimes smug beneficiaries of Received Standard English.
He does not know what he has killed and it is only chance and neophobia that he does not eat the child.
That's called "neophobia."
The long list of martyrs to free enquiry, from Socrates onward, shows how mechanical this neophobia (fear of new semantic signals) is.