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What 'Big Candy' Knows About Gummy Bears And Our Brains

Fun fact about the WFPL newsroom: it is fully-stocked with lots of candy. Mini-chocolate bars, peanut butter cups, Jolly Ranchers -- the list goes on and the candy bowl is constantly being refilled.

Then last week, a gigantic bag of gummy bears appeared, which led to a question from our digital editor, Jonese Franklin: “Do gummy bears really come in different flavors, or do we just think they taste different because they are different colors?”

The newsroom was split on the answer, so we conducted a highly unscientific experiment -- a blind taste test.

And while initially the whole question seemed kind of silly, several people played along and once they closed their eyes, their accuracy in differentiating the flavors majorly declined.

It turns out this phenomenon is something that real scientists are studying, too -- and something big candy companies have counted on for years.

Don Katz is a Brandeis University neuropsychologist who specializes in taste.

“I have a colleague in the UK, Charles Spence, who did the most wonderful experiment,” Katz said. “He took normal college students and gave them a row of clear beverages in clear glass bottles. The beverages had fruit flavorings. One was orange, one was grape, apple, lemon.”

According to Katz, the college students did a great job of differentiating between the flavors of the clear liquid.

“But then he added food coloring,” Katz said. “The ‘wrong’ food coloring for the liquid.”

So, the grape-flavored liquid was then colored orange, for example.

“While I wouldn’t say they went to chance, their ability to tell which was which got really subpar all of the sudden,” Katz said. “The orange beverage tasted orange. The yellow beverage tasted like lemonade. There wasn’t a thing they could do about it.”

It was so powerful that even when Spence told the students that it was his job as a scientist to mess with the conditions and asked them to just tell him what they tasted without considering the color, they still couldn’t do it.

“This is absolutely something that the candy companies know and while I don’t usually talk about gummy bears, what I like to talk about is Skittles,” Katz said. “The Skittles people, being much smarter than most of us, recognized that it is cheaper to make things smell and look different than it is to make them actually taste different.”

Katz continued: “So, Skittles have different fragrances and different colors -- but they all taste exactly the same.”

Katz said this works because our brains are used to processing certain sensory cues together. For example, our brains associate the color yellow, a lemon smell and a slightly acidic taste with each other; when you’re offered two of the three sensory cues, your brain will fill in the blanks.

“There are some fruity candies in which they do specific flavorings in different ones, higher end gummy bears actually do taste different,” Katz said. “But yeah, a lot of candy companies have figured out this is just a way to save money.”

For reference, when I reached out to Haribo, a candy company known for their gummy bears, I got an email back from their vice president of marketing, Keith Dannoff, that said:
I can’t speak for all gummy bears products but I can definitely tell you that the HARIBO Gold-Bears gummy bear products in the U.S. contain 5 distinct flavors: Strawberry, Lemon, Orange, Pineapple and Raspberry.
This means the green gummy bear – the one that everyone, myself included – kept identifying in our unofficial taste test as watermelon or green apple, is actually strawberry-flavored; which serves as one example of how big candy companies haven’t quite figured out our brains yet.