Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Last bite decides if you would pick the food again

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Jun, 2014 06:00 PM
    Know why do you want to try that chocolate cake or mouth-watering pizza again? Because of the last bite.
     
    Your memory for that last bite of a steak or chocolate cake may be more influential than memory for the first bite in determining when you want to eat it again, according to research.
     
    "Research has told us a lot about factors that influence what foods people want to consume, but less is known about factors that influence when they want to consume a particular food again," explained Emily Garbinsky from Stanford University's graduate school of business.
     
    In one study, the researchers asked 134 undergraduate students to sample three flavours of crackers and then choose one to eat.
     
    They were then given a specific number of crackers and were asked to rate how much they enjoyed each one after they ate it.
     
    The results revealed that students who had eaten the larger portion (15 crackers) reported significantly lower enjoyment at the end than those who had eaten the smaller portion (three crackers).
     
    These findings replicate previous findings on "sensory-specific satiety": Each bit of food is less pleasant than the one before it.
     
    The bigger the portion, the less enjoyment you get out of the last few bites.
     
    More importantly, participants' enjoyment of the last cracker seemed to influence how soon the students wanted to eat the crackers again.
     
    "These results suggest that the most recent tastes experienced in the last few bites of a given food drive our decisions about when to eat that food again," Garbinsky noted.
     
    A glass of juice, bowl of ice cream, or bag of potato chips contains many units of very similar stimuli that are consumed one sip or bite at a time until the entire portion has been eaten.
     
    "So, if we take a lot of bites of the same food in succession, our memory for the last bites may interfere with our ability to accurately remember the initial bites of that food," researchers emphasised in a study published in the journal Psychological Science.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    What Women Actually Want in Men? Read On

    What Women Actually Want in Men? Read On
    What types of men heterosexual women find attractive may have no relationship with their menstrual cycles, a significant study shows.

    What Women Actually Want in Men? Read On

    Even indoor tanning raises melanoma risk

    Even indoor tanning raises melanoma risk
    Do you use indoor tanning believing that this is safe? Beware as this may increase the chances of your developing melanoma, an alarming study says.

    Even indoor tanning raises melanoma risk

    Young women! Husky voice may kill your job chances

    Young women! Husky voice may kill your job chances
    Good work experience and a charming personality fine but a deep, husky voice could be a deterrent for a young woman to land a good job.

    Young women! Husky voice may kill your job chances

    'I can' mentality can help shed extra fat

    'I can' mentality can help shed extra fat
    Want to maintain your slim figure years after childbirth? Develop an "I can" mentality whenever confronted with barriers to your everyday physical activities, a study suggested.

    'I can' mentality can help shed extra fat

    People in desk jobs gain weight for sure

    People in desk jobs gain weight for sure
    If you have gained extra waistline, do not get enough sunlight for your bones and strain your eyes in front of a computer screen, you have all reasons to complain about your desk job.

    People in desk jobs gain weight for sure

    Revealed: How cancer cells spread

    Revealed: How cancer cells spread
    The migration of cancer cells from the primary tumour to nearby tissues and organs is regulated by a signalling pathway in a finely orchestrated manner, researchers have discovered.

    Revealed: How cancer cells spread