Jelly Bean Experiment
Students eat jelly beans with their (a) eyes and noses closed, (b) just eyes closed, and (c) with all their senses available
Materials
- Jelly beans. It's best to use basic flavored jelly beans (e.g., cherry, grape, lemon, orange)
- Sheet of paper to write guesses
- Pen or pencil
Directions
- Each participant will be given 3 jelly beans of the same flavor (very important!). One person (a parent or teacher) should organize 3 jelly beans per person and keep the flavors hidden from the participants.
- Jelly Bean #1
- Participants need to plug their nose and close their eyes. It is important that they keep their nose plugged until after they have swallowed the jelly bean completely.
- Give each participant a jelly bean
- Have each participant guess what flavor they had and write it down
- Jelly Bean #2
- Don't forget - same flavor as #1!
- Participants need to only close their eyes
- Give each participant a jelly bean
- Have each participant guess what flavor they had and write it down
- Jelly Bean #3
- Don't forget - same flavor as #1 and #2!
- Participants get all their senses! Eyes and noses open
- Give each participant a jelly bean
- Have each participant guess what flavor they had and write it down
Discussion Questions
- Were all your guesses the same? If not, how and why did they differ?
- Which jelly bean (1, 2, or 3) was hardest to guess? Easiest? What do you think causes these differences?
Discussion Points
- A lot of perception is from multiple sensory inputs. Vision would give clues via color, and smell is a large component of taste (think about when you are congested with a cold and food tastes more bland)
- Without all the sensory input, single senses are less accurate and can mislead you.
Faculty Coordinators
Valerie Hedges, PhD
Casey Henley, PhD
MSUNeuroscienceOutreach
@gmail.com