Subjective Touch Sensitivity Leads to Behavioral Shifts in Food Texture Sensitivity and Awareness
Neurotypical individuals have subjective sensitivity differences that may overlap with the more heavily studied clinical populations. However, it is not known whether these subjective differences in sensory sensitivity are modality specific or lead to behavioral shifts. In our experiment, we measured the touch sensitivity and texture awareness differences in two neurotypical groups having either a high or low subjective sensitivity in touch modality. To measure touch sensitivity, individuals performed discrimination tasks across three types of stimuli (liquid, semi-solid, and solid). Next, they performed two sorting exercises for two texture-centric food products: cookies and crackers. The stimuli that required low oral processing (liquid) were discriminated at higher rates by the high subjective sensitivity compared to the solid stimuli. Additionally, discrimination strategies between several foods in the same product space were different across the groups, and each group used attributes other than texture as differentiating characteristics. The results show subjective touch sensitivity influences behavior (sensitivity and awareness). However, we show that the relationship between subjective touch sensitivity and behavior generalizes across several modalities.