4.4 Article

Visual Cues and Food Intake: A Preregistered Replication of Wansink et al. (2005)

Journal

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/xge0001503

Keywords

preregistered replication; eating behavior; visual cues; portion size; consumption

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This article discusses the factors that regulate food intake and suggests that visual cues may play an important role. In the study, participants who unknowingly ate from self-refilling bowls consumed more soup, but they did not perceive themselves as having eaten more or feeling more satiated. A replication study found similar results, highlighting the control visual cues have over food intake.
Imagine a bowl of soup that never emptied, no matter how many spoonfuls you ate-when and how would you know to stop eating? Satiation can play a role in regulating eating behavior, but research suggests visual cues may be just as important. In a seminal study by Wansink et al. (2005), researchers used self-refilling bowls to assess how visual cues of portion size would influence intake. The study found that participants who unknowingly ate from self-refilling bowls ate more soup than did participants eating from normal (not self-refilling) bowls. Despite consuming 73% more soup, however, participants in the self-refilling condition did not believe they had consumed more soup, nor did they perceive themselves as more satiated than did participants eating from normal bowls. Given recent concerns regarding the validity of research from the Wansink lab, we conducted a preregistered direct replication study of Wansink et al. (2005) with a more highly powered sample (N = 464 vs. 54 in the original study). We found that most results replicated, albeit with half the effect size (d = 0.45 instead of 0.84), with participants in the self-refilling bowl condition eating significantly more soup than those in the control condition. Like the original study, participants in the self-refilling condition did not believe they had consumed any more soup than participants in the control condition. These results suggest that eating can be strongly controlled by visual cues, which can even override satiation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available