TV-watching snackers beware: You won't notice you're full if your attention is elsewhere.

 

TV-watching snackers beware: You won't notice you're full if your attention is elsewhere.

Eating while doing something perceptually demanding makes it more difficult to notice when you feel full, according to new research.


    

FULL STORY

Eating while doing something perceptually-demanding makes it more difficult to notice when you feel full, shows new research from the University of Sussex.


Professor Martin Yeomans, Dr. Sophie Forster, and colleagues found that when an engaging task takes up your senses, you are less likely to adjust how much extra food or drink you consume. The team tested 120 participants, giving them lower and higher calorie drinks and giving them tasks that demanded low and high amounts of their attention. The paper "Ingested but not perceived: response to satiety cues disrupted by perceptual load" is published today, 12 August 2020, in the journal Appetite.


The team found that participants who were fully engaged in a perceptually-demanding task ate roughly the same number of follow-up crisps regardless of whether they were initially given a high or low-calorie drink. But the people who were engaged in a task which demanded less of them could adjust how much of the additional snack they ate. The people in this group ate 45% fewer crisps after the higher energy drink than after the lower energy drink.


Previous research has shown that when perceptual demand is high, where the senses are engaged fully, the brain filters out some of the sensory information. This is the first time that research has shown that sensory and nutrient cues associated with becoming full (satiety) could be filtered out similarly.


Professor Martin Yeomans from the School of Psychology at the University of Sussex said:

"Our study suggests that if you're eating or drinking while your attention is distracted by a highly engaging task, you're less likely to tell how full you feel. You're more likely to keep snacking than if you'd been eating while doing something less engaging. This is important for anyone wanting to stay a healthy weight: if you're a habitual TV-watching snacker -- watching, say, an engaging thriller or mystery, or a film with a lot of audio or visual effects -- you're not likely to notice when you feel full. Video-gamers and crossword solvers should also take note!

"We already knew that feeling full could be affected by the texture and appearance of food, as well as pre-existing expectations about how full we think a type of food should make us feel. Now we also know that feeling full depends on how much sensory information our brains are processing at the time."


About the research

One-hundred and twenty participants consumed either a low-satiety (75kcal) or high-satiety (272kcal and thicker texture) drink while simultaneously completing a task which was either low or high in perceptual demand. The participants who were given the small perceptual load task and were given the high-satiety drink felt and ate 45% less of the snack offered to them afterward. However, the participants who were given the higher load perception task were less able to tell when they felt full and ate more of the snacks offered to them. The researchers conclude that a person's ability to notice when the body feels full depends on how much available attention there is 'left' in the brain.


The results provide the first evidence that the Load Theory of attention (the idea that a person has a limited amount of sensory information they can notice) can be successfully applied to eating habits.


Story Source:

Materials provided by the University of Sussex. Initially written by Anna Ford. 


Journal Reference:

  1. Jenny Morris, Chi Thanh Vi, Marianna Obrist, Sophie Forster, Martin R. Yeomans. Ingested but not perceived: Response to satiety cues disrupted by the perceptual loadAppetite, 2020; 104813 DOI: 10.1016/j.appet.2020.104813

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

PEOPLE WITH OBESITY BURN LESS CALORIES DURING THE DAY

WHAT CAUSES ITCHING, AND WHAT STOPS IT?

A VEGAN DIET IMPROVES CARDIOVASCULAR HEALTH, ACCORDING TO A NEW STUDY