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Erschienen in: International Journal of Behavioral Medicine 3/2021

29.06.2020 | Full length manuscript

Variety Salience and Enjoyment of Repetitiously Consumed Foods: a Field Experiment

verfasst von: Richie L. Lenne, Traci Mann, Rachel J. Burns, Zata Vickers, Joseph P. Redden

Erschienen in: International Journal of Behavioral Medicine | Ausgabe 3/2021

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Abstract

Background

The formation of healthy eating habits is supported by repeatedly eating specific foods, but repetition can also reduce enjoyment of those foods. Making the variety in one’s diet salient increases enjoyment of repetitiously consumed foods in a lab setting. Therefore, in a longitudinal field experiment, we tested a brief intervention to remind participants of the variety in their diet. We hypothesized that increasing salience of dietary variety would prevent declines in enjoyment of the food and increase the likelihood that participants would be willing to eat the food again later.

Method

Participants (n = 139) ate a granola bar each day for 2 weeks. Before eating it, participants randomly assigned to the treatment condition recalled other recently consumed foods (to increase salience of dietary variety). Control subjects recalled variety in an unrelated domain (music). Participants reported their enjoyment of the granola bar after they ate it each day, and in a lab session after the study ended, the number of granola bars they took from a selection of snacks was counted.

Results

Self-reported feelings of enjoyment declined steadily, and contrary to our first hypothesis, increasing salience of dietary variety did not prevent this decline. Increasing salience of dietary variety did increase the likelihood that participants would choose to take the same kind of granola bar 2 weeks later.

Conclusion

Brief exercises that make variety in one’s diet more salient may not prevent reductions in enjoyment of a repetitiously consumed food, but may still support continued consumption of the food.
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Metadaten
Titel
Variety Salience and Enjoyment of Repetitiously Consumed Foods: a Field Experiment
verfasst von
Richie L. Lenne
Traci Mann
Rachel J. Burns
Zata Vickers
Joseph P. Redden
Publikationsdatum
29.06.2020
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
International Journal of Behavioral Medicine / Ausgabe 3/2021
Print ISSN: 1070-5503
Elektronische ISSN: 1532-7558
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12529-020-09916-2

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