Ideas for weight loss:
Portion size me:
Ideas for weight loss |
plate-size induced consumption norms and win-win solutions for reducing food intake and waste.
Research on the self-serving of food has empirically ignored the role that visual consumption norms play in determining how much food we serve on different sized dinnerware. We contend that dinnerware provides a visual anchor of an appropriate fill-level, which in turn, serves as a consumption norm
Research on the self-serving of food has empirically ignored the role that visual consumption norms play in determining how much food we serve on different sized dinnerware. We contend that dinnerware provides a visual anchor of an appropriate fill-level, which in turn, serves as a consumption norm
Study 1:
The trouble with these dinnerware-suggested consumption norms is that they vary directly with dinnerware size
Study 2 :
shows Chinese buffet diners with large plates served 52% more, ate 45% more, and wasted 135% more food than those with smaller plates. Moreover, education does not appear effective in reducing such biases. Even a 60-min, interactive, multimedia warning on the dangers of using large plates had seemingly no impact on 209 health conference attendees, who subsequently served nearly twice as much food when given a large buffet plate 2 hr later
Study 3:
These findings suggest that people may have a visual plate-fill level--perhaps 70% full--that they anchor on when determining the appropriate consumption norm and serving themselves.
Study 4:
suggests that the Delboeuf illusion offers an explanation why people do not fully adjust away from this fill-level anchor and continue to be biased across a large range of dishware sizes. These findings have surprisingly wide-ranging win-win implications for the welfare of consumers as well as for food service managers, restaurateurs, packaged goods managers, and public policy officials.
You Are What Your Plate Size Tells You to Eat:
Many of us have heard that the size of our plate can affect how much we eat. For example, he has found that eating popcorn from a bigger tub, eating soup from a refilling bowl, and eating chicken wings where the bones disappear below the table all lead to more consumption.2,4,5 His general hypothesis is that much of the obesity in our society is caused by habits, with one very big habit being that we rely on visual cues to tell us how much to eat.1
Our Eyes Are Bigger Than Our Metabolisms:
Ideas for weight loss |
Plate Size Matters:
Ideas for weight loss |
much people serve
themselves at a Chinese buffet-style restaurant if they use small or large plates. Participants in the study did not know they were being observed and could choose either a small or large plate to serve themselves. People who chose a large plate tended to put about 52% more food on their plate and ate about 45% more. One potential issue is that maybe these dinners chose the larger plate because they were hungrier and therefore they ate more. However, the results are consistent with other studies that show people tend to eat more when given a large plate. From a business standpoint, I can see why buffets tend to use small plates as it certainly cuts the cost of food preparation (or maybe they are thinking of the health of the consumers). The take-home point from this study is that we might want to purchase smaller plates for our homes.
Behavior Habits Are Hard to Break:
Ideas for weight loss |
Our Estimations Are Illusions:
plate size, portion size, craig marker, overeating, science behind plate sizeStudy number four investigated the cause of this relationship and how it affects our eating habits. Basically, we have trouble with the Delbeouf illusion. That is, we see different sizes depending what is the external reference. In the picture, the inner circle appears to be different sizes depending if there is a large circle or a small circle around it. We have this same difficulty with food. We have difficulties judging how much food there is as our brain tricks us into thinking there is more or less depending on the plate size. That finding is exactly what the researchers saw when people were asked to estimate soup portions. Our brain uses the external reference to guide us into how much there is of something. Most of the time this shortcut works. However, when it comes to estimating food the shortcut backfires on us.
How to Apply This Knowledge:
There has been an ongoing philosophical discussion of whether the mind can override the instinctual aspects of our self. The argument has swayed back and forth between saying we are rational creatures and we are creatures of our emotions. From an evolutionary perspective, our instincts have had many more years to be refined and finely honed (an analogy would be the tenth version of software). The rational conscious system is relatively new (continuing the analogy, it is beta software). When it comes to eating it seems like we rely a lot more on habit than on our rational thinking side.
plate size, portion size, craig marker, overeating, science behind plate sizeThis fact is quite important when designing eating plans. We need to take the thinking portion out of it. We can’t rely on the will of the individual, as we need to change the cues that guide us what to eat. Probably the simplest solution is to find smaller plates. That is easy at home, but in restaurants it can be more difficult. One trick I use at Cheesecake Factory (home of some really large plates) is to keep the bread plate and move a fitting portion of my food to it. The remaining food on the serving plate I ask to be packed up to take home. I can overflow the bread plate and I feel very full afterwards.
Another idea is to keep tempting foods away. In another study by Wansink and colleagues, they found that moving a candy dish further away from people led to a lot less consumption.3 So, keep your healthy food choices nearby (and in small serving dishes) and the unhealthy ones inaccessible.
Santé nutrition magazine: S'informer sur la nutrition et la santé, diététiques, nutritionnels
Ideas for weight loss:
Portion size me:
Ideas for weight loss |
plate-size induced consumption norms and win-win solutions for reducing food intake and waste.
Research on the self-serving of food has empirically ignored the role that visual consumption norms play in determining how much food we serve on different sized dinnerware. We contend that dinnerware provides a visual anchor of an appropriate fill-level, which in turn, serves as a consumption norm
Research on the self-serving of food has empirically ignored the role that visual consumption norms play in determining how much food we serve on different sized dinnerware. We contend that dinnerware provides a visual anchor of an appropriate fill-level, which in turn, serves as a consumption norm
Study 1:
The trouble with these dinnerware-suggested consumption norms is that they vary directly with dinnerware size
Study 2 :
shows Chinese buffet diners with large plates served 52% more, ate 45% more, and wasted 135% more food than those with smaller plates. Moreover, education does not appear effective in reducing such biases. Even a 60-min, interactive, multimedia warning on the dangers of using large plates had seemingly no impact on 209 health conference attendees, who subsequently served nearly twice as much food when given a large buffet plate 2 hr later
Study 3:
These findings suggest that people may have a visual plate-fill level--perhaps 70% full--that they anchor on when determining the appropriate consumption norm and serving themselves.
Study 4:
suggests that the Delboeuf illusion offers an explanation why people do not fully adjust away from this fill-level anchor and continue to be biased across a large range of dishware sizes. These findings have surprisingly wide-ranging win-win implications for the welfare of consumers as well as for food service managers, restaurateurs, packaged goods managers, and public policy officials.
You Are What Your Plate Size Tells You to Eat:
Many of us have heard that the size of our plate can affect how much we eat. For example, he has found that eating popcorn from a bigger tub, eating soup from a refilling bowl, and eating chicken wings where the bones disappear below the table all lead to more consumption.2,4,5 His general hypothesis is that much of the obesity in our society is caused by habits, with one very big habit being that we rely on visual cues to tell us how much to eat.1
Our Eyes Are Bigger Than Our Metabolisms:
Ideas for weight loss |
Plate Size Matters:
Ideas for weight loss |
much people serve
themselves at a Chinese buffet-style restaurant if they use small or large plates. Participants in the study did not know they were being observed and could choose either a small or large plate to serve themselves. People who chose a large plate tended to put about 52% more food on their plate and ate about 45% more. One potential issue is that maybe these dinners chose the larger plate because they were hungrier and therefore they ate more. However, the results are consistent with other studies that show people tend to eat more when given a large plate. From a business standpoint, I can see why buffets tend to use small plates as it certainly cuts the cost of food preparation (or maybe they are thinking of the health of the consumers). The take-home point from this study is that we might want to purchase smaller plates for our homes.
Behavior Habits Are Hard to Break:
Ideas for weight loss |
Our Estimations Are Illusions:
plate size, portion size, craig marker, overeating, science behind plate sizeStudy number four investigated the cause of this relationship and how it affects our eating habits. Basically, we have trouble with the Delbeouf illusion. That is, we see different sizes depending what is the external reference. In the picture, the inner circle appears to be different sizes depending if there is a large circle or a small circle around it. We have this same difficulty with food. We have difficulties judging how much food there is as our brain tricks us into thinking there is more or less depending on the plate size. That finding is exactly what the researchers saw when people were asked to estimate soup portions. Our brain uses the external reference to guide us into how much there is of something. Most of the time this shortcut works. However, when it comes to estimating food the shortcut backfires on us.
How to Apply This Knowledge:
There has been an ongoing philosophical discussion of whether the mind can override the instinctual aspects of our self. The argument has swayed back and forth between saying we are rational creatures and we are creatures of our emotions. From an evolutionary perspective, our instincts have had many more years to be refined and finely honed (an analogy would be the tenth version of software). The rational conscious system is relatively new (continuing the analogy, it is beta software). When it comes to eating it seems like we rely a lot more on habit than on our rational thinking side.
plate size, portion size, craig marker, overeating, science behind plate sizeThis fact is quite important when designing eating plans. We need to take the thinking portion out of it. We can’t rely on the will of the individual, as we need to change the cues that guide us what to eat. Probably the simplest solution is to find smaller plates. That is easy at home, but in restaurants it can be more difficult. One trick I use at Cheesecake Factory (home of some really large plates) is to keep the bread plate and move a fitting portion of my food to it. The remaining food on the serving plate I ask to be packed up to take home. I can overflow the bread plate and I feel very full afterwards.
Another idea is to keep tempting foods away. In another study by Wansink and colleagues, they found that moving a candy dish further away from people led to a lot less consumption.3 So, keep your healthy food choices nearby (and in small serving dishes) and the unhealthy ones inaccessible.
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