4.4 Article

Might an overweight waitress make you eat more? How the body type of others is sufficient to alter our food consumption

Journal

JOURNAL OF CONSUMER PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue 2, Pages 146-151

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcps.2010.03.006

Keywords

food choice; obesity; social influence; priming; identification

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This paper investigates how people's food choices can be shaped by the body type of others around them. Using a professionally constructed obesity prosthesis, we show that the body type of a (confederate) server in a taste test study was sufficient to alter both the quantity (Experiment 1) and specific choices (Experiment 2) participants made but that chronic dieters and non-dieters exhibited opposite effects. While non-dieters ate more snacks when the server was thin, dieters ate more when the server was heavy. Dieters were also more persuaded by a heavy (vs. a thin) server, choosing both a healthy and unhealthy snack more often when she recommended it to them. We suggest these results may be attributable to identification with the server. (C) 2010 Society for Consumer Psychology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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