October to March:
10:00 - 17:00
April to September:
10:00 - 18:00
Adults: CHF 15.00
Reduced rate: CHF 12.00
Children 6-15: CHF 6.00
Children 0-5: Free
Quai Perdonnet 25
CH-1800 Vevey
Switzerland
Create an account in seconds and discover the amazing Alimentarium experience !
The aim is to understand the role our five senses play in our relationship to food.
Our eyes give us information about:
Sight also allows us to identify food as:
Our five senses enable us to receive information about the outside world. Some of these senses react to 'physical' stimuli and others to 'chemical' stimuli.
Take our eyes, for example. What type of stimulus do you think they respond to? Physical or chemical? With sight, there is a reaction to physical stimuli.
This is also the case with hearing and touch.
Smell and taste, however, are responses to chemical stimuli.
We would often find it hard to identify food without the sense of sight.
Sight generally provides us with a first impression of the food we eat.
Our eyes are made up of over 100 million receptors. 5% of these receptors are represented by what are called the retinal cones.
Most of these cones are located in the centre of the retina. They tell us about the colour and sharpness of objects.
The other 95% are represented by the retinal rods. Most of these rods are concentrated around the edge of the retina. They are 1000 times more sensitive to light than the cones and enable us to see things in dim light. However, they cannot distinguish between colours.
VISUAL INFORMATION
Eyes are able to send visual information to the brain at high speed. They send information to the brain in a few milliseconds via the optic nerve.
Our eyes provide us with information about the shape of food. Is it round like an orange or a melon, or oval like a lemon or a potato?
We also see the colour of food. For example, beans and spinach are green, whereas strawberries and cherries are red.
Then there is the state of food. In other words, if it is liquid, like water or fruit juice, or solid like a biscuit or a hazelnut.
Our eyes also enable us to register the size of food. Is it more like the size of a pea or the size of a watermelon?
Finally, there is the texture of food, which can be rough like an oyster shell or smooth like the skin of a tomato.
Food can come in many shapes, sizes and forms.
Take an apple, for example. You can eat an apple whole, but also in quarters or even puréed. An apple can be green, yellow or red. It can be solid, but it can also be liquid, in the form of fruit juice.
Sight allows us to recognize food, to know whether we are going to like it or not and if it is ready to be eaten. For example, is the strawberry red enough and ripe enough to be picked and eaten?
More importantly, sight allows us to distinguish food that is edible from food that is poisonous.
We see very quickly whether food has gone off or is too old. However, sight does not give us the 'full' picture. Food may have gone bad, been spoilt or contaminated without it being possible to 'see' this. The reverse is also true. Fruit does not have to be perfect to taste good. For example, russet apples have blemishes and are wrinkled but they are nice and juicy!
Sight can influence us, but it can also mislead us. If the natural colour of food has been changed, it may not be appetizing any more. What would you say to a blue apple or green meat, for example?
Colours can also create expectations with regard to other perceptions. For example, red may be associated with a soft fruit, such as a strawberries and create the expectation of a strawberry flavour.
Similarly, yellow will be associated with bananas and green with mint.
Consequently, it may be easy to deceive someone by offering them red water that has a banana flavour or green water with an orange flavour.
One last point on the sense of sight. Seeing food can make us salivate and prepare to ingest and digest food even before it is in our mouths, hence the expression that we also ‘eat with our eyes'.