Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Emotional awareness promotes healthy eating

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Nov, 2014 10:16 AM
    Learning to pay attention to your emotions could enhance the choices you make with regard to food, thereby helping you lose weight, says a new research.
     
    Emotional ability training improves food choices beyond a nutrition knowledge, the findings showed.
     
    "With a better understanding of how they feel and how to use emotions to make better decisions, people will not only eat better, they will also likely be happier and healthier because they relate better to others and are more concerned with their overall well-being," said one of the study authors, Blair Kidwell from the Ohio State University in the US.
     
    Study participants were given general training in recognising basic emotions in themselves and in others.
     
    After the training, both the trained participants and people who had received no training were given the opportunity to choose a snack of either a healthy item or a chocolate bar.
     
    Those who had received the training were more likely to choose the healthy item.
     
    Three months later participants in both groups were weighed: Those who had received training in recognising their emotions had, on an average, lost weight whereas those who had received no training had actually put on weight.
     
    Consumer educational programmes should put less focus on reading nutritional labels and to instead encourage exercises that enhance emotional awareness, the researchers said.
     
    The study appeared in the Journal of Marketing Research.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Get Quirky in Gifting This Diwali

    Get Quirky in Gifting This Diwali
    From induction cookers that can play music to lamps made from recycled wine bottles, to ethnic wear with handmade tribal art and customised cupcakes...

    Get Quirky in Gifting This Diwali

    Why people accept inequality

    Why people accept inequality
    People appreciate fairness in much the same way as they appreciate money for themselves and by that logic fairness does not necessarily...

    Why people accept inequality

    Depressed people, too, believe in brighter future

    Depressed people, too, believe in brighter future
    Like most adults, even depressed people believe in a brighter future, but for them this optimistic belief may not lead to better outcomes, found a research....

    Depressed people, too, believe in brighter future

    Repeated viewing of violence and sex 'desensitises' parents

    Repeated viewing of violence and sex 'desensitises' parents
    In a stunning report, researchers have revealed that when it comes to sex and violence, the more parents watch TV shows or movies...

    Repeated viewing of violence and sex 'desensitises' parents

    How sperms compete to win

    How sperms compete to win
    In situations where a female copulates with several males in quick succession, only the best sperm, marked by speed, size and viscosity...

    How sperms compete to win

    Sibling support boosts altruism in boys

    Sibling support boosts altruism in boys
    A good relationship with a sibling promotes development of sympathy and levels of altruism in boys, says a study....

    Sibling support boosts altruism in boys