A Little More Effort, a Lot Less Eaten
Last week we talked about how a little bit of effort - specifically, walking about 6 feet - made study participants eat fewer chocolate candies than having the bowl of candy on the participants' desk. In a study in the journal Appetite (2013;71:89-94), researchers in Switzerland took the study idea and ran with it: how small did the effort need to be to affect intake? They created 3 different studies to assess the effects of different types of effort on intake.
The first study used chocolate candies in three different conditions: first, identical candies were presented in individual foil wrappers and the test subject was instructed to eat as many candies as they wanted, putting the used wrappers in a bin. Second, the same wrapped candies were used but the participants were told to leave the empty wrappers on the table. Finally, in the third condition the candies were presented unwrapped. The participants ate significantly more candies when the candies were unwrapped than when the candies were wrapped, but it didn't appear to matter whether the wrappers were left on the table or put in a bin.
But leaving the wrappers on the table reminds you of how many you've eaten, the researchers noted. So they created study number 2, which used candies in a clear overwrap, unwrapped candies that the participant was required to pick up with tongs before eating, and unwrapped candies they could pick up with their fingers. Once again, the participants ate far more unwrapped candies that were picked up with the fingers than the candies they had to unwrap or pick up with tongs.
Okay, so it appears that more effort led to eating fewer chocolates. What if the food in question wasn't something that was considered "unhealthy?" Would effort then make a difference? For the third study they added dried apricots to the test items, resulting in four conditions: unwrapped chocolate candies to be eaten with the fingers, unwrapped candies to be picked up with tongs, unwrapped dried apricots to be eaten with the fingers, and unwrapped dried apricots to be picked up with tongs. As you might expect, all of the participants ate more of the apricots than the candy. Yet the participants still ate significantly more when they could pick up the food with their fingers.
What this means for you
Knowing that a little more effort to obtain the food can result in eating less can be applied to your life in two ways: first, think of ways to make eating less healthy items a more effortful experience. This might mean always using utensils or taking the time to put a portion onto a plate or in a bowl rather than eating directly out of the package. Second, make eating healthier foods easier to eat. Buying prewashed salad greens is more expensive than washing and cutting your own (especially if you don't use it all before it goes bad), but it reduces the effort needed to make yourself a salad. Similarly, keeping a favorite fruit or vegetable on hand in a ready to eat form (pre-peeled carrots come to mind) can make it easier to choose that quick, healthy snack.
First posted: September 25, 2013