Difference between revisions of "FEB 9"

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==7: FEB 9. Unit Two: More moral psychology, politics, biology and philosophical moral theories!==
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==8. FEB 9: Unit 2: Critique of the US Industrial Food System==
  
===Assigned===
+
===Assigned Work===
  
:*Robert Sapolsky, from ''Behave'', Chapter 13, "Morality and doing the Right Thing, Once You've Figured Out What that Is." pp. 478-483.
+
:*Moss, ''Salt, Sugar, Fat,'' Ch. 4, "Is It Cereal or Candy?"
:*Haidt, Chapter 3, "Elephants Rule" (52-72)
+
:*If you have not seen "Food, Inc." please watch it during this unit (video file in Shared folder)
:*The Trolley Problem
 
::*[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6WB3Q5EF4Sg The Trolley Problem]. Variations on the Trolley Problem: [[http://www.mcsweeneys.net/articles/lesser-known-trolley-problem-variations ]]
 
::*Self-driving cars with Trolley problems: [http://www.cnet.com/news/self-driving-car-advocates-tangle-with-messy-morality/]
 
:*[https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/10/the-cold-logic-of-drunk-people/381908/ The Cold Logic of Drunk People]
 
  
:*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mL7Pt-NHraU Youtube intro to utilitarianism]. Apologies for the very rough political speculations at the end!
+
===In-class===
  
===In-class content===
+
:*Lecture from: Lawless, Kristin. ''Formerly Known as Food'', C8 "Food Choice" (197-218) (20)
 +
:*Discussion of food extrusion and industrial fiber
  
:*Consequentialism - Utilitarianism
+
===Lawless, Kristin.  ''Formerly Known as Food'', Chapter 8, "Food Choice"===
  
===Philosophical Moral Theories: Consequentialism -- Utilitarianism===
+
:*We are "upside down" on food
 +
::*Ironically, dietary advice has promoted processed and industrial foods. Food companies use nutritional messaging to sell food that is not, ultimately, part of a "healthy pattern of eating."
 +
::*Concentration of companies (10 companies control almost every food and beverage brand, 6 control 90% of seed market), controls of foods
 +
::*Poor disproportionately exposed to BPA. Should you worry about BPA? Mayo Clinic [https://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/nutrition-and-healthy-eating/expert-answers/bpa/faq-20058331] or American Chemistry Council [https://www.factsaboutbpa.org/benefits-applications?gclid=CjwKCAiA6Y2QBhAtEiwAGHybPSKGwS8yqXXt_I0RREHCP4xbqxakdcAkiqlWmhzmDOeOm4Qy0RsZaxoClr0QAvD_BwE].  You decide.
 +
::*Poor have double the diabetes rate.  p. 200 other SES related food/health outcomes.  Point: Dietary disease disproportionately affects the poor in the US, who also have less access to health care. 
 +
::*Advertising effects: logos stimulate taste buds.  targeted advertising to poor and non-white populations. Beyonce campaign in 2013.
  
:*Brief historical intro to utilitarians: Early industrial society, "social static" (early efforts to measure social conditions)Utilitarians were seen as reformers.
+
:*Thesis: Am food companies have created a kind of acceptance (normalization) of industrial foods and a set of ideas about health and nutrition that are largely the product of advertising by industrial food companies over about 40 years.  - food elites and food desert dwellers alike.  interesting. Elites are marketed "organic Goldfish" "Organic cocoa puffs"  
 +
::*At Occupy Wall street protests: vegan oatmeal from McDonalds, veggie sandwiches from Subway.   
 +
::*Households over $60k eat the most fast food.  
  
::*Eudaimonistic or Hedonic (Well-being or Happiness oriented) vs. Non-Eudaimonistic (Duty)
+
:*Thesis: Am food companies also divide us, stigmatizing whole foods as food for elites. McD's commercial as example. [Healthy food culture is often stigmatized as extreme, counter-cultural, and obsessive.]  [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoW2Xf6VDhg]
:::*Two views: 1) Morality is fundamentally eudaimonistic "in the longrun" even if it in particular proximate circumstances in does not always involve positive emotions. 2) Morality and moral responses realize disinterested values like reason and justice, that are not related to promoting happy outcomes (Kant).
+
::*Part of the method is to opposed the Nanny state, while normalizing industrial food versions of health claims.
 +
::*Bloomberg soda case
  
:*Fundamental consequentialist intuitionMost of what's important about morality can be seen in outcomes of our actions, for people especially, but also for what they value (animals, the environment, etc.). Virtue will show up in the measuredness of the outcomeGood intentions are especially valuable when they lead to actions that realize them.
+
:*208: Background to industrial food advertisingTargeted women ('60s): ind food higher SES, part of the futureCritique of food movement for elitism and paternalism.
::*Hard to imagine a non-eudaimonistic consequentialism, but medieval christian europe or a contemporary theocracy might work. 
 
  
:*Basic principles of utilitarian thought:
+
===Isolated Fiber in Industrial Foods===
  
::*'''Equal Happiness Principle''': Everyone's happiness matters to them as much as mine does to me. Everyone's interests have equal weight.
+
:*[http://www.todaysdietitian.com/newarchives/121112p30.shtml Fiber Facts about Cereal]
:::*Note: this is a way to universalizeRecall earlier discussion about conditions for ethical discourse.  
+
:*And you would think "fiber is fiber," but no.  Isolated fiber.  Also, an example of "nutritionism"Real fiber needs are not a fad.
::*Ethics is about figuring out when we need to take a moral concern about something and, if we do, then we take on constrainst (conversational): universalizability, equality of interests.   
+
:*Intact (soluble and insoluble) vs. Isolated (synthetically produced) - Resistant starch, polydextrose, indigestible dextrins. Research question: Are these MACs?  Guessing not. [https://www.fda.gov/food/food-labeling-nutrition/questions-and-answers-dietary-fiber FDA FAQ on dietary fiber]. Notice the list of synthetic ingredients that keep getting added to "dietary fiber". 
::*'''Principle of Utility''': Act always so that you promote the greatest good for the greatest number. 
+
:*Isolated fibers "... lack the array of vitamins, nutrients, antioxidants and plant chemicals found in whole grains, fruits and vegetables and that are known to benefit health, says Jennifer Anderson, professor of food science and human nutrition at Colorado State University in Fort Collins." [https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2010-jan-11-la-he-nutrition11-2010jan11-story.html]
:::*Hedonic version: Act to promote the greatest pleasure ...
+
:*From the FDA site:  
:::*Classical utilitarian: greatest balance of range of qualitatively diverse pleasures and aspects of well-being.  
+
::*Q: If a product currently contains added isolated or synthetic non-digestible carbohydrates that do not meet the definition of dietary fiber, what is the deadline for manufacturers to modify product labeling?
:::*Preference utilitarian version: Act to maximally fulfill the our interest in acting on our preferences.
+
::*A: FDA has issued a final rule to extend the compliance dates for the Nutrition Facts and Supplement Facts label final rule and the Serving Size final rule from July 26, 2018, to Jan. 1, 2020, for manufacturers with $10 million or more in annual food sales. Manufacturers with less than $10 million in annual food sales have an extra year to comply—until Jan. 1, 2021.
 +
::*It appears that the FDA includes many isolated fiber ingredients that it deems as "dietary fiber", but it also moving toward requiring labeling of isolated fiber that does not meet it's definition of "dietary fiber".
 +
:*Avoid isolated fiber or other synthetic fiber.
  
::*But what is utilityWhat is a preference?
+
===Digression on Food Extrusion===
::*'''Utility''': pleasure, what is useful, happiness, well-being.
+
:*Food extrusion of cereals and snack can reduce complexity of carbs and raise the glycemic index of the carbs in these foods. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_extrusion]
:::*Is the utilitarian committed to maximizing happiness of individuals directly?  A utilitarian focused on promoting utility, might still acknowledge that promoting human happiness is mostly about protecting conditions for an individual's autonomous pursuit of happiness. Consider cases. 
+
:*So, if extrusion damages nutrition, what about pastaWhy doesn't it have a high glycemic index like breakfast cereals?
:::*Conditions for the pursuit of happiness:  Order, stability, opportunity, education, health, rights, liberty.
+
:*"In pasta products, gluten forms a viscoelastic network that surrounds the starch granules, which restricts swelling and leaching during boiling. Pasta extrusion is known to result in products where the starch is slowly digested and absorbed (59,60). Available data on spaghetti also suggest that this product group is a comparatively rich source of resistant starch (61). The slow-release features of starch in pasta probably relates to the continuous glutenous phase. This not only restricts swelling, but possibly also results in a more gradual release of the starch substrate for enzymatic digestion. Pasta is now generally acknowledged as a low glycemic index food suitable in the diabetic diet. However, it should be noted that canning of pasta importantly increases the enzymic availability of starch, and hence the glycemic response (62).[http://www.fao.org/docrep/w8079e/w8079e0j.htm]
:::*Issue of protection of rights in utilitarian thought.   
 
::*'''Preferences''': 
 
:::*An indirect way to solve the problem of lack of agreement about goods. Let's maximize opportunities for people to express their preferences.  Positive: pushing the question of the good life to the individual. Negative: High levels of individualism may reduce social trust.  Lack of action on opportunities to reduce suffering. 
 
:::*Thought experiment: Returning a gun to an angry person.  Is the angry person's preference one that has to count?
 
:::*Cultural contradictions in our preferences: we prefer health, but we also "prefer" to eat the western diet. Which preference should the utilitarian focus on?  Some preferences are based on bias or prejudice.
 
:::*Need some standard of rational or considered preference. What a "reasonable person" would do. Maybe less disagreement about that than "the good".  (Example: Intervening in the lives of homeless mentally ill and suffering.)
 
  
====Small Group: Assessing Utilitarianism====
+
===Moss, Ch. 4, "Is It Cereal or Candy?"===
  
:*Consider applying utilitarianism to different kinds of moral problems (from interpersonal ethics to public policy questions).  Identify three situations in which you would want to use utilitarianism and three situations in which you would not.
+
:*'''Origin story of commercial cereals'''
  
===Sapolsky, Robert. Behave. C 13, "Morality and Doing the Right Thing"  (479-483)===
+
::*John Harvey Kellog vs. Will Kellog. Drama at Battle Creek Michigan.  Will adds sugar.  No turning back.
 +
::*note early ad claims by Post for Grape-Nuts and Postum -- shows something about food psychology and tendency to fad diets.
  
:*Is moral decision making mostly reasoning or intuition?  
+
:*'''Cereal or Candy?'''
::*The case for primacy of cognition:
+
::*$660 million to $4.4 billion 1970 to mid 80s.
:::*Lots of examples of reason based rules in law and social institutionsThis kind of reasoning activates the dlPFC and TPJ (temporoparietal junction) - theory of mind tasks. Suppress TPJ and less concern about intentions! Yikes.
+
::*breakfast cereal growth coincided with increased labor participation by womenEasy meal to eliminate cooking for, especially with cheap milk.
:::*Theory of Mind tasks are those involving perceiving and inferring intentionsCentral to social life!
+
::*Ira Shannon, Dental activist!, measures sugar content on breakfast cereals after Feds refuse. 74
:::*Moral reasoning is skewed toward the cognitive in some predictable ways: doing harm worse than allowing it. commission vs. omission.  tend to look for malevolent causes more than benevolent.   
+
::*Jean Mayer, Harvard nutritionist, big deal, early obesity research.  title for chapter from an essay of hisurged moving cereals over 50% sugar to the candy aisle.
 +
::*note nomenclature issue in the public policy discussion: breakfast cereals v. breakfast foodswho cares?
  
::*The case for primacy of intuition:
+
:*'''Ad bans and the Nanny State'''
:::*Problem with moral reasoning (cognitive) view: lots of evidence for intuition and emotion.  We often make moral judgements automatically.
+
::*76: '''Key theoretical claim:''' The breakfast cereal industry responded to concern over sugar in part by developing market campaign to children and by putting marketing in charge of product development (85)
:::*Reviews Haidt's Social Intuitionism: "moral thinking is for social doing". The reasoning is mostly to show others what we're doing (and to "advertise" it).  "virtue signaling"
+
::*76ff: political story of sugar in 1977 -- FTC over responds to concern about marketing of cereals to kids by banning all advertising to kids, arguably overplaying their hand.  Battle between advertising lobby and FTCadvertising ban failedWashington Post labels it "the National Nanny"role of gov't issue. "social engineering".  still, FTC report was credible and damning on the topic of advertising sugar to kids.  note the industry documents showing the industry's effort to "engineer" their consumer.
:::*Moral decisions activate the vmPFC, orbitalfrontal cortex, insular cortex, and anterior cingulatePity and indignation activate different structuresSexual transgressions activate the insula.   
+
::*2/3 price of the cereal is in the advertising (!).
:::*In moral quandries, activation of amygdala, vmPFC, and insula typically '''precede''' dlPfc activation.
 
:::*people with damage to the vmPFC will sacrifice one relative to save five strangers, something control subjects just don't do!
 
  
===Haidt, Chapter 3, "Elephants Rule"===
+
:*'''1990s and post-truth advertising'''
 +
::*1990's competition from store brands -- 82ff: note value of minute market share movements.  "product news" - continual change in marketing.  Kellog is losing out at one point, p. 85: "This team (to address market share loss) would turn the traditional Kellogg way of creating products on its head.  Instead of having the food technicians toil away in their labs experimenting with tastes and textures, the marketing folks hunted for ideas that suited the advertising needs at Kellogg first and worried about pleasing the palates of consumers second. Interesting. '''Possible thesis: We entered a "post truth" era in the food industry before politics.'''
  
*Personal Anecdote from Haidt's married life: your inner lawyer  (automatic speech)
+
::*Moss finishes chapter with their strategic response: concept of "permission" (when a taste is close enough for the consumer to say that had an experience of a real thing through the taste, example: the taste of rice crispy treats in a cereal.  "We didn't have to be literal.  We just had to have the flavor spot on." (87)
:*Priming studies: "take" "often" -- working with neutral stories also
 
  
*'''Research supporting "intuitions come first"'''
+
::*'''Key theme''' from Kellog's market share loss:  This is a real crisis for a food company.  87ff.  CinnaMon/Bad appple campaign
 +
::*odd twist - the "Cinnamon" and "bad apple" commercials. [[https://abcnews.go.com/Health/Business/story?id=962115&page=1]].  Best one was taken down!  Here's a [https://www.google.com/search?rlz=1C1GCEA_enUS860US860&sxsrf=ALeKk005Lk4DEEeIbDoMqU-Ej5L-onX9XA%3A1600721771991&ei=axNpX4WEPJf--gS0wIqwDw&q=Apple+Jacks+cinnaMom+bad+apple+commercial+youtube&oq=Apple+Jacks+cinnaMom+bad+apple+commercial+youtube&gs_lcp=CgZwc3ktYWIQAzIHCCEQChCrAjoECAAQRzoHCCEQChCgAVCDF1jiHmDyH2gAcAF4AIABc4gBiQWSAQM3LjGYAQCgAQGqAQdnd3Mtd2l6yAEIwAEB&sclient=psy-ab&ved=0ahUKEwjF5emkkfvrAhUXv54KHTSgAvYQ4dUDCA0&uact=5 page] with some others.  [https://www.google.com/search?sa=N&rlz=1C1GCEA_enUS860US860&sxsrf=ALeKk01gCn-_fPaUBgziWF0WvBHtrhXQUA:1600722845000&source=univ&tbm=isch&q=apple+jacks+CinnaMon+bad+apple+commercial+youtube&ved=2ahUKEwjgi72klfvrAhVDHjQIHTv6Dl04ChDsCXoECAoQHg&biw=1680&bih=907#imgrc=g-0xUvyrcNg_zM Images from Bad apple commercial]
 +
::*Frosted Mini-Wheats became "brain food".  fraudulent research.  91-92 [https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2013/05/30/187330235/no-frosted-mini-wheats-don-t-make-your-kids-smarter Commercial in this NPR story]  Also, check out these oldies. [https://www.google.com/search?q=old+frosted+mini+wheat+commercials+youtube&oq=old+frosted+mini+wheat+commercials+youtube&aqs=chrome..69i57.9198j0j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8]
 +
::*Kellogg even tried comparing kids who ate Mini-Wheats to kids who skipped breakfast!
  
:*1. Brains evaluate instantly and constantly
+
::*The Kellogg story reinforces the idea that food may be a difficult business to subject to the demands of publicly traded corporations(Note: Doesn't mean food can't benefit from other market realizations.)
::*Zajonc on "affective primacy"- small flashes of pos/neg feeling from ongoing cs stimuli - even applies to made up language "mere exposure effect" tendency to have more positive responses to something just be repeat exposure.
 
 
 
:*2. Social and Political judgements are especially intuitive
 
::*'''Affective Priming''' - flashing word pairs with dissonance: "flower - happiness" vs. "hate - sunshine"
 
::*Implicit Association Test  [https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/ Project Implicit] 
 
::*Flashing word pairs with political terms causes '''dissonance'''. measurable delay in response when, say, conservatives read "Clinton" and "sunshine".  Dissonance is pain.
 
::*Todorov's work extending "attractiveness" advantage to snap judgements.  "Competency" judgments of political candidates correct 2/3 of time. note:
 
::*Judgements of competence.  note speed of judgement .1 of a second.(59)
 
 
 
:*3. Bodies guide judgements
 
::*Fart Spray exaggerates moral judgements (!)
 
::*Zhong: hand washing before and after moral judgements.
 
::*Helzer and Pizarro: standing near a sanitizer strengthens conservatism.
 
 
 
:*4. Psychopaths: reason but don't feel
 
::*Transcript from Robert Hare research
 
 
 
:*5. Babies: feel but don't reason
 
::*Theory behind startle response studies in infants
 
::*helper and hinderer puppet shows:  [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=anCaGBsBOxM Yale Theory of Mind & Baby prosociality]  [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a7JbLSIirXI Basic Puppet set up for prosociality studies on babies]. 
 
::*reaching for helper puppets  "parsing their social world"
 
 
 
:*6. Affective reactions in the brain  '''Belief Change'''
 
::*Josh Greene's fMRI studies of Trolley type problems.  [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6WB3Q5EF4Sg The Trolley Problem]
 
::*Pause on Joshua Greene quote, p. 67
 
:*When does the elephant listen to reason?
 
:*Paxton and Greene experiments with incest story using versions with good and bad arguments.  Harvard students showed no difference, though some when allowed delayed response.
 
::*Friends... The Importance of Friends...Friends are really important...
 
 
 
===SW1 Intuitions Come First (600 words)===
 
 
 
:*'''Stage 1''': Please write an 600 word maximum answer to the following question by '''February 11, 2020 11:59pm.'''
 
::*Topic: Jonathan Haidt claims that the first principle of moral psychology is, "Intuitions Come First, Reasoning Second".  Drawing only on the first three chapters of Haidt, but also Sapolsky 479-483, explain the meaning of this principle and how it is supported with research (about 400 words).  Then try to speculate on the implications of this principle for ethics (about 200 words).
 
 
 
:*'''Advice about collaboration''': I encourage you to collaborate with other students, but only up to the point of sharing ideas, references to class notes, and your own notes.  Collaboration is part of the academic process and the intellectual world that college courses are based on, so it is important to me that you have the possibility to collaborate.  It's a great way to make sure that a high average level of learning and development occurs.  The best way to avoid plagiarism is to NOT share text of draft answers or outlines of your answer.  Keep it verbal.  Generate your own examples. 
 
 
 
:*Prepare your answer and submit it in the following way:
 
::# '''Do not put your name in the file or filename'''.  You may put your student id number in the file.  Put a word count in the file.
 
::# In Word, check "File" and "Options" to make sure your name does not appear as author.  You may want to change this to "anon" for this document.
 
::# Format your answer in double spaced text in a 12 point font, using normal margins. 
 
::# Save the file in the ".docx" file format using the file name "IntuitionsFirst".
 
::# Log in to courses.alfino.org.  Upload your file to the '''Points dropbox'''. 
 
 
 
:*'''Stage 2''': Please evaluate '''four''' student answers and provide brief comments and a score. Review the [[Assignment Rubric]] for this exercise.  We will be using the Flow and Content areas of the rubric for this assignment. Complete your evaluations and scoring by '''February 17, 11:59pm.'''  
 
::*Use [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1qDWHZcLz4BDJqI61DiGIKpL1Xa1NBpY7UYLw9ZOZNu0/edit?usp=sharing this Google Form] to evaluate '''four''' peer papers. 
 
 
 
::*To determine the papers you need to peer review, I will send you a key with saint names in alphabetically order, along with animal names. You will find your saint name and review the next four (4) animals' work. 
 
 
 
::*Some papers may arrive late.  If you are in line to review a missing paper, allow a day or two for it to show up.  If it does not show up, go ahead and review enough papers to get to four reviews.  This assures that you will get enough "back evaluations" of your work to get a good average for your peer review credit.  (You will also have an opportunity to challenge a back evaluation score of your reviewing that is out of line with the others.)
 
 
 
:*'''Stage 3''': I will grade and briefly comment on your writing using the peer scores as an initial ranking.  Assuming the process works normally, my scores will be close to the peer scores.  Up to 14 points.
 
 
 
:*'''Stage 4''': Back-evaluation: After you receive your peer comments and my evaluation, take a few minutes to fill out this quick "back evaluation" rating form: [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdgKCYITDTSOOHcvC3TAVNK-EZDsP4jiiyPj-7jdpRoNUsLPA/viewform?usp=sf_link].  '''Fill out the form for each reviewer, but not Alfino.'''  Up to 10 points, in Points.
 
 
 
::*Back evaluations are due '''February 24, 11:59pm'''.
 

Revision as of 21:57, 9 February 2022

8. FEB 9: Unit 2: Critique of the US Industrial Food System

Assigned Work

  • Moss, Salt, Sugar, Fat, Ch. 4, "Is It Cereal or Candy?"
  • If you have not seen "Food, Inc." please watch it during this unit (video file in Shared folder)

In-class

  • Lecture from: Lawless, Kristin. Formerly Known as Food, C8 "Food Choice" (197-218) (20)
  • Discussion of food extrusion and industrial fiber

Lawless, Kristin. Formerly Known as Food, Chapter 8, "Food Choice"

  • We are "upside down" on food
  • Ironically, dietary advice has promoted processed and industrial foods. Food companies use nutritional messaging to sell food that is not, ultimately, part of a "healthy pattern of eating."
  • Concentration of companies (10 companies control almost every food and beverage brand, 6 control 90% of seed market), controls of foods
  • Poor disproportionately exposed to BPA. Should you worry about BPA? Mayo Clinic [1] or American Chemistry Council [2]. You decide.
  • Poor have double the diabetes rate. p. 200 other SES related food/health outcomes. Point: Dietary disease disproportionately affects the poor in the US, who also have less access to health care.
  • Advertising effects: logos stimulate taste buds. targeted advertising to poor and non-white populations. Beyonce campaign in 2013.
  • Thesis: Am food companies have created a kind of acceptance (normalization) of industrial foods and a set of ideas about health and nutrition that are largely the product of advertising by industrial food companies over about 40 years. - food elites and food desert dwellers alike. interesting. Elites are marketed "organic Goldfish" "Organic cocoa puffs"
  • At Occupy Wall street protests: vegan oatmeal from McDonalds, veggie sandwiches from Subway.
  • Households over $60k eat the most fast food.
  • Thesis: Am food companies also divide us, stigmatizing whole foods as food for elites. McD's commercial as example. [Healthy food culture is often stigmatized as extreme, counter-cultural, and obsessive.] [3]
  • Part of the method is to opposed the Nanny state, while normalizing industrial food versions of health claims.
  • Bloomberg soda case
  • 208: Background to industrial food advertising. Targeted women ('60s): ind food higher SES, part of the future. Critique of food movement for elitism and paternalism.

Isolated Fiber in Industrial Foods

  • Fiber Facts about Cereal
  • And you would think "fiber is fiber," but no. Isolated fiber. Also, an example of "nutritionism". Real fiber needs are not a fad.
  • Intact (soluble and insoluble) vs. Isolated (synthetically produced) - Resistant starch, polydextrose, indigestible dextrins. Research question: Are these MACs? Guessing not. FDA FAQ on dietary fiber. Notice the list of synthetic ingredients that keep getting added to "dietary fiber".
  • Isolated fibers "... lack the array of vitamins, nutrients, antioxidants and plant chemicals found in whole grains, fruits and vegetables and that are known to benefit health, says Jennifer Anderson, professor of food science and human nutrition at Colorado State University in Fort Collins." [4]
  • From the FDA site:
  • Q: If a product currently contains added isolated or synthetic non-digestible carbohydrates that do not meet the definition of dietary fiber, what is the deadline for manufacturers to modify product labeling?
  • A: FDA has issued a final rule to extend the compliance dates for the Nutrition Facts and Supplement Facts label final rule and the Serving Size final rule from July 26, 2018, to Jan. 1, 2020, for manufacturers with $10 million or more in annual food sales. Manufacturers with less than $10 million in annual food sales have an extra year to comply—until Jan. 1, 2021.
  • It appears that the FDA includes many isolated fiber ingredients that it deems as "dietary fiber", but it also moving toward requiring labeling of isolated fiber that does not meet it's definition of "dietary fiber".
  • Avoid isolated fiber or other synthetic fiber.

Digression on Food Extrusion

  • Food extrusion of cereals and snack can reduce complexity of carbs and raise the glycemic index of the carbs in these foods. [5]
  • So, if extrusion damages nutrition, what about pasta? Why doesn't it have a high glycemic index like breakfast cereals?
  • "In pasta products, gluten forms a viscoelastic network that surrounds the starch granules, which restricts swelling and leaching during boiling. Pasta extrusion is known to result in products where the starch is slowly digested and absorbed (59,60). Available data on spaghetti also suggest that this product group is a comparatively rich source of resistant starch (61). The slow-release features of starch in pasta probably relates to the continuous glutenous phase. This not only restricts swelling, but possibly also results in a more gradual release of the starch substrate for enzymatic digestion. Pasta is now generally acknowledged as a low glycemic index food suitable in the diabetic diet. However, it should be noted that canning of pasta importantly increases the enzymic availability of starch, and hence the glycemic response (62).[6]

Moss, Ch. 4, "Is It Cereal or Candy?"

  • Origin story of commercial cereals
  • John Harvey Kellog vs. Will Kellog. Drama at Battle Creek Michigan. Will adds sugar. No turning back.
  • note early ad claims by Post for Grape-Nuts and Postum -- shows something about food psychology and tendency to fad diets.
  • Cereal or Candy?
  • $660 million to $4.4 billion 1970 to mid 80s.
  • breakfast cereal growth coincided with increased labor participation by women. Easy meal to eliminate cooking for, especially with cheap milk.
  • Ira Shannon, Dental activist!, measures sugar content on breakfast cereals after Feds refuse. 74
  • Jean Mayer, Harvard nutritionist, big deal, early obesity research. title for chapter from an essay of his. urged moving cereals over 50% sugar to the candy aisle.
  • note nomenclature issue in the public policy discussion: breakfast cereals v. breakfast foods. who cares?
  • Ad bans and the Nanny State
  • 76: Key theoretical claim: The breakfast cereal industry responded to concern over sugar in part by developing market campaign to children and by putting marketing in charge of product development (85)
  • 76ff: political story of sugar in 1977 -- FTC over responds to concern about marketing of cereals to kids by banning all advertising to kids, arguably overplaying their hand. Battle between advertising lobby and FTC. advertising ban failed. Washington Post labels it "the National Nanny". role of gov't issue. "social engineering". still, FTC report was credible and damning on the topic of advertising sugar to kids. note the industry documents showing the industry's effort to "engineer" their consumer.
  • 2/3 price of the cereal is in the advertising (!).
  • 1990s and post-truth advertising
  • 1990's competition from store brands -- 82ff: note value of minute market share movements. "product news" - continual change in marketing. Kellog is losing out at one point, p. 85: "This team (to address market share loss) would turn the traditional Kellogg way of creating products on its head. Instead of having the food technicians toil away in their labs experimenting with tastes and textures, the marketing folks hunted for ideas that suited the advertising needs at Kellogg first and worried about pleasing the palates of consumers second. Interesting. Possible thesis: We entered a "post truth" era in the food industry before politics.
  • Moss finishes chapter with their strategic response: concept of "permission" (when a taste is close enough for the consumer to say that had an experience of a real thing through the taste, example: the taste of rice crispy treats in a cereal. "We didn't have to be literal. We just had to have the flavor spot on." (87)
  • Key theme from Kellog's market share loss: This is a real crisis for a food company. 87ff. CinnaMon/Bad appple campaign
  • odd twist - the "Cinnamon" and "bad apple" commercials. [[7]]. Best one was taken down! Here's a page with some others. Images from Bad apple commercial
  • Frosted Mini-Wheats became "brain food". fraudulent research. 91-92 Commercial in this NPR story Also, check out these oldies. [8]
  • Kellogg even tried comparing kids who ate Mini-Wheats to kids who skipped breakfast!
  • The Kellogg story reinforces the idea that food may be a difficult business to subject to the demands of publicly traded corporations. (Note: Doesn't mean food can't benefit from other market realizations.)