Color-blind people may be less picky eaters. Here's why.

Seeing the world with a restricted color palate seems to tone down an emotion-based resistance to new foods.

A black and white photo of Julia Childs with an array of fresh ingredients in the kitchen
Watching Julia Child in color or black and white could influence how appetizing the food looks to some audience members.
(Image credit: Photo Researchers via Getty Images)

The seventh season of Julia Child's "The French Chef," the first of the television series to air in color, revealed how color can change the experience of food. While Child had charmed audiences in black and white, seeing "Bouillabaisse à la Marseillaise" in color helped elevate the experience from merely entertaining to mouthwatering.

I am a psychologist who studies visual abilities. My work, through a serendipitous research journey into individual differences in food recognition, uncovered a unique role for color in emotional responses to food.

Isabel Gauthier
David K. Wilson Professor of Psychology, Vanderbilt University

Isabel Gauthier heads the Object Perception Lab in the Psychology Department at Vanderbilt University. She is interested in how we perceive, recognize and categorize objects (such as faces, letters, cars and novel objects such as Greebles). Her laboratory studies the structure of individual differences in perceptual abilities.