City
Epaper

Looking at pictures of food repeatedly may help curb overeating

By IANS | Updated: May 23, 2023 16:10 IST

London, May 23 While images of food are known to influence binge eating, it can also trick the ...

Open in App

London, May 23 While images of food are known to influence binge eating, it can also trick the brain into feeling full, if we see pictures of the same product repeatedly, according to a study.

Researchers from Aarhus University in Denmark carried out a number of experiments which revealed that we can get a sense of satiety if we see the same image more than 30 times, which may help us curb overeating.

"The participants who were shown the picture many times also chose a smaller portion than those who had only seen the picture three times, when we subsequently asked about the size of the portion they wanted," Tjark Andersen, from the Department of Food Science at Aarhus.

It may sound strange that the participants felt full without actually eating anything. But this is really quite natural, explained Andersen. How we think about food has a large influence on our appetite.

The new research examined the number of repetitions needed and whether variation in the images removes the sense of satiety.

To investigate whether variation in food completely removes the sense of satiety, Andersen and his colleagues designed a number of online experiments. They ended up getting more than 1,000 people through their digital experiments.

First they showed a picture of just orange candy. Some participants were shown the picture three times, others 30 times. The group that saw most pictures of the candy felt most satiated afterwards, Andersen said.

He noted that the findings could be used as a weight loss strategy.

Since 1975, the number of overweight people worldwide has tripled. According to the WHO, obesity is one of the biggest health challenges facing humans. And the reason why we become too fat is that we eat too much food and too much unhealthy food and we do not take enough exercise.

"Think if you developed an app based on a Google search. Let's say you wanted pizza. You open the app. Choose pizza and it shows a lot of photos of pizza while you imagine eating it. In this way, you could get a sense of satiety and maybe just stop wanting pizza," Andersen said


rvt/ksk/

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Aarhus UniversityDepartment of food science at aarhusLondonThe University Of LondonDenmarkSouth LondonQueen Mary University Of LondonDanish Meteorological InstituteMadame Tussauds LondonKimpton Fitzroy London HotelLondon CourtUniversity College London
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalMumbai-London Atlantic Flight Makes Emergency Landing, More Than 200 Indian Flyers Stuck in Turkey With No Aid

NationalMamata Banerjee Jogging Video: West Bengal CM Says See No One Left Behind During Her Jog in Saree at Hyde Park in London

InternationalLondon: Heathrow Airport to Remain Closed All Day Due to Power Outage After Fire at Hayes Electrical Substation

InternationalLondon Fire: Massive Blaze Erupts at Electrical Station in Hayes, Leaving 16,000 Without Power (Watch Videos)

Social ViralWatch: Woman and Stranger’s Spontaneous "Malhari" Dance Sparks Viral Moment in London

Health Realted Stories

HealthCentre to unveil digital portal for medical value travel: Minister

HealthPilot plant of fortified rice kernels launched at CSIR-NIIST

HealthEven light exercise can help slow cognitive decline in people at risk of Alzheimer's: Study

HealthCountrymen collectively, strongly fought malaria: PM Modi

HealthKerala Health Minister seeks report on why she was not invited to cathlab inauguration