TV-Watching Snackers Beware: You Won’t Notice You’re Full If Your Attention Is Elsewhere

Typography

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

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 your senses are taken up by an engaging task, you are less likely to be able 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 which demanded both 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) in the journal Appetite.

The team found that participants who were fully engaged in a perceptually demanding task ate roughly the same amount of follow-up crisps regardless of whether or not 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.

Read more at University of Sussex

Photo Credit: JESHOOTS-com via Pixabay