Hidden Brain - Episode 33: Food for Thought
Episode Date: May 31, 2016What do large tables, large breakfasts, and large servers have in common? They all affect how much you eat. This week on Hidden Brain, we look at the hidden forces that drive our diets. ...
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Millions of us try to lose weight every year.
We go on diets, read books, buy pills off the internet.
Collectively, we spend billions of dollars trying to slim down.
And the truth is, we might as well flush a lot of that money down the toilet.
All those workouts, challenges and temptations. toilet. As they say in the infomercials, there must be a better way. This week, we're
going to talk about psychological tricks we can play on ourselves to help us eat better and to follow through on our best intentions.
My name is Adam Brumberg. I am the Deputy Director of the Cornell Food and Brand Lab at Cornell University.
Adam Brumberg and his colleagues research food psychology and they find that many of our food choices aren't really conscious choices. The majority of your food decisions are based on habit or convenience.
You know, habit being, I did it yesterday, worked out fine.
I'm going to do it again and convenience.
Well, I'm sitting at my desk and there is a package of ring things on the desk
and so I'm just going to eat that and instead of going to find something that's healthier.
Once you understand these bad unconscious patterns,
you could stay on guard, use willpower to fight them.
But this also a smarter way.
You could turn the tables and get these unconscious habits
to work for you.
Yeah, I mean, we like to say that the best diet
is the one you don't know you're on.
Our research shows you make about 200 food related decisions
a day, which is a lot.
By food decisions, Adam doesn't just mean whether you eat a salad or a sandwich.
It's also, how much salt do you put on your food?
Do you have a slice of cake when your coworker celebrates a birthday?
Do you reward yourself for going to the gym with a cookie?
Here's one example of how you can turn the tables on your unconscious habits.
Adam and his colleagues find that volunteers and lab experiments make worse choices when
they're stressed.
The stress out folks were more likely to buy a dessert or to select a fried item as opposed
to the people asked to think of things they were grateful for, they were more likely to
get salad or grilled chicken or whatever it was.
Once you understand how stress shapes mindless eating,
you can set up a system when you're not stressed
that allows you to take advantage of this tendency.
If you pack a lunch the night before,
you're definitely gonna put together something
that's a lot more helpful than if you are,
you know, doing as you're running out of the house
in the morning.
Now Adam Brumberg says,
when you're stressed out at work
and mindlessly reaching for something to eat,
your hands gonna come up with a carrot, rather than a ring.
You have to work really hard to eat too many baby carrots.
We decided to devote this whole episode to ideas like this.
Coming up in a moment, senior stop-what science correspondent Dan Pink and I are going to
create psychological tricks that might help your actual waistline look like the one you want.
Behavioral science has given us lots of tricks for eating less, smaller plates, smaller
portions, but a new study this year in the Journal of the Association of Consumer Research
offers another option, larger tables.
So pull up a chair at a big table and stay with us.
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If you love listening to Hidden Brain, you're going to want to check out the new CodeSwitch
podcast.
Hosted by Jean Demby and Shereen Marisol Moraggi, CodeSwitch is a podcast that helps us understand
how race and identity shape our lives.
This week, they tackle the subject of whiteness.
What does it mean? And why is it important that we figure out how to talk about it?
Find code switch on the NPR1 app and at npr.org slash podcast.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vitaantha.
Samar is around the corner which means beaches and swimsuits are around the corner, too.
Today, with the view of getting myself into beach-ready shape, I've asked Daniel Ping
to come in to trade psychological tricks on how to eat better.
We're also going to look at some surprising factors that make us eat worse.
Dan, of course, is our senior stop-what science correspondent, or actually, I should say,
our svelte senior stop what science correspondent welcome Dan thank you
chunker now I would say my body is beach ready on the radio what about yours Dan
uh you know what I don't really think in those terms I tend to go out in
public uh fully if not heavily closed
all right now as you know on stop what science Dan and I give one another 60
seconds to
summarize interesting social science research.
As we approach the 60 second mark, our producers will bring up the music just like they do
with the Oscars.
Dan and I will each present three different pieces of social science research.
We'll also spend a little more time between the segments unpacking the science and its
implications.
Our topic today is dieting and the many ways in which hidden and unconscious factors shape
our diets.
Dan, if you're ready, your first 60 seconds starts now.
Behavioral science has given us lots of tricks for eating less.
Smaller plates, smaller portions, but a new study this year in the Journal of the Association
of Consumer Research offers another option, larger tables.
What?
Yes, for these experiments, researchers got a bunch of pizzas
and a bunch more college students.
They found that students consumed the least amount of pizza
when they were served small slices on a large table.
Sounds weird, but there's a good explanation.
When students saw the small slices on a tiny table,
they quickly noticed just how measly those slices were.
So, of course, they grabbed more.
But when those same small slices were on a big table,
their attention shifted away from the smallness
of the pizza slices and toward the largeness of the table.
On a large table, the small slices
seemed not so measly after all.
So students didn't feel the need to pile as many on their plate and ended up consuming less pizza overall.
The lesson here? Large tables may prevent large people.
Alright Dan, I have a question.
Yes.
Are the researchers saying that the fact that we see these pizza slices differently on small tables versus large tables,
are they saying this is because of an optical illusion?
A little bit of an optical illusion.
The way our vision works is that we don't see things
in absolute terms, we see them in relative terms.
So when you have small slices on a tiny table,
you can actually see how small those slices are.
But on a big table, everything looks about the same size
because there's greater contrast. Therefore, people on the big table, everything looks about the same size because there's greater contrast.
Therefore, people on the big table will eat the small slices,
they'll eat fewer of them, and consume less pizza in total.
That makes sense.
So, Shunker, you and I are sitting here at a large table ourselves.
So, why don't you give us a small idea?
I'm gonna give you a small portion of an idea, Dan.
It's gonna slice.
It's gonna fit in 60 seconds.
It turns out it isn't just the size of your dining table
that influences how much you eat.
Your dining companions might make a difference, too.
I did a story about this for NPR some time ago.
Molly Allen O'Donnell told me that when she was a graduate student
at Indiana University of Pennsylvania,
she sat down in a college cafeteria
and looked at how much food people bought for lunch and dinner.
She noticed that when women sat with other women, they ordered an average 833 calories of food.
When they sat with men, they ordered only 721 calories.
So women ate more when they ate with women and they ate less when they ate with men.
Now, what about men? I hear you asking the question, Dan.
What about men? When men sat with other men, they ordered 952 calories, but when they sat
with women, they ordered 1,100 and 62 calories. So another way to put this is, both men and
women ate more when they ate with women, and both men and women ate less when they ate
with men. Now, I'm sure we're going to talk about why this might be the case, Dan.
But I want to take a moment to shout out to every overweight married heterosexual man who
is listening.
The next time your wife tells you to lose a few pounds, you might want to say, honey,
it's your fault.
Oh nice.
Nice.
You know, I think it's interesting.
The takeaway for me is that if you want to lose weight, eat with men.
I think that is why. But why would is why do men eat so much around women?
I don't think the study conclusively answers that question then.
There was a related study that I saw by Kevin Niffin at Cornell University.
He and his colleagues found that men eat 93% more pizza and 86% more salad when eating
with a woman compared to eating with a man.
So it isn't just eating more unhealthy food, it's just eating more food in general.
Now, other studies have shown that heterosexual men in general tend to pursue more risky behaviors
in the presence of women.
Studies show that mixed sex groups, for example, make more risky financial decisions.
So it's possible that men are acting out some kind of evolutionary script by eating more food and
Demonstrating they're capable of risk-earned behaviors. So they lose their inhibitions
They show I'm a big risk taker who can go out there and slay that saber-tooth Tiger
Exactly. So for my experience back many many years ago
I would just be so psyched that a woman would be willing to eat with me that probably lose my
Innovations start gorging on pizza.
You know, maybe that men who are able to eat a lot of food may have signaled some kind
of evolutionary fitness in our ancient past.
Now of course, when food is so plentiful today, it might signal something else altogether.
A lack of fitness.
All right, let's see if you can signal to me that you can stick your time, Dan.
Your next 60 seconds starts right now.
You are what you eat.
We've all heard that.
But this next study shows you are also when you eat.
Researchers at Tel Aviv University's Medical School randomly assign 93 overweight women
into two groups.
Both groups ate the same food.
1400 calories a day, not very much, for 12 weeks.
But one group consumed half the calories at breakfast. But one group consumed half the calories at breakfast.
The other group consumed half the calories at dinner.
When the study was over, the big dinner group had lost an average of about 7 pounds, not
that.
But the big breakfast group, those who ate the same food, just earlier in the day, lost
more than double that, an average of more than 17 pounds.
They also reduced their waistline more than the dinner group, and even had greater drops
in glucose, insulin, and triglycerides, high levels of which can lead to metabolic problems.
Again, same food, same calories, just a different schedule.
The bottom line, in eating as in life, timing is everything.
So what I find interesting about the study done is that it contradicts a view that I think many people hold,
which is that dieting is all just about calories in, calories out.
Because what the study is suggesting is that it's not just about calories in, calories out,
it's when you eat those calories that can make a huge difference.
Yeah, yeah, our bodies are very, very complex systems. They, they don't work like simple
machines. They're much more complex than that. And a lot of, uh, endocrinologists, a lot
of physicians are trying to figure out exactly what that right mix is, but it turns out that
the questions of when can be just as important as questions of what. Now, here's a what question
for you. What do you got on your plate for
your next study?
Alright, this next study will be of interest to anyone who hangs around with small kids.
What's one way you get youngsters to eat healthy food? You educate them about the health
benefits of the food. But is this actually a good idea? New social science research suggests
maybe not.
Miha Maymarin at Northwestern, anle at Fishbuck at the University of Chicago,
find that children who are told that crackers are healthy
infer that this means the crackers are not yummy and they eat less of them.
The researchers tried another experiment with carrots. They told preschoolers
that eating carrots would help them become better readers.
Again, they find that creating this kind of instrumental goal causes the preschoolers
to eat fewer carrots.
Basically the researchers think that when preschoolers are given one kind of association,
crackers are healthy or carrots help you with reading, they unconsciously infer that
alternate associations must be weaker, the carrots and the crackers can't be tasty.
The moral of the story is, if you want kids to eat certain kinds of food,
sell the tastiness of the food rather than the health benefits.
Wow, so sell the steak, not the sizzle.
Exactly.
Yeah, I also think another factor that could be at work here is that any child
who hears an adult say that carrots will make you a better reader knows
that is not an adult they could ever trust.
In other words, kids are just good lie detectors.
Yeah, exactly.
Kids are good lie detectors, no matter what they eat.
But it is interesting because we do, I mean, I remember when my kids were growing up, you
do want them to eat healthy, and so you're not sure how to persuade them to do it.
And so basically what you're saying is they push the good taste rather than the ancillary benefits.
Yeah, and I think when we think about many things in human behavior, Dan, I think we often
assume that presenting the rational arguments to people is the best way to go. And so if
you're selling carrots, you sell the rational arguments that carrots are good for you.
The rational arguments don't always work and sometimes they backfile.
Yeah, especially when it comes to eating.
All right, let's see if this rational argument has any benefits.
Dan, if you're going to be done on time,
you have to do your next segment on time
and your next 60-second starts right now.
Well, as we've discussed,
all kinds of hidden forces affect how much we eat.
But here's one I didn't expect.
The weight of your waiter or waitress.
Oh, boy.
Tim During of the University of Gertengen in Germany and Cornell's Brian Wonsink, one
of the leading scholars of eating behavior, went to more than 50 restaurants in the US,
from chains like Apple, bees, and Olive Garden to smaller independent establishments, and
they looked at interactions between diners and servers.
They found that customers were four times as likely to order dessert when they were served
by wait staff with high body mass indexes
Then those with low BMI's
Wow
People also ordered more alcohol from heavy servers than from slimmer ones and the BMI of the diners themselves didn't matter at all
Now this is what's called an observational study. It wasn't a controlled experiment
It doesn't mean that heavy waiters necessarily cause people to order
the apple chimichis cake.
Still, it shows once again how quiet factors
the setting we're in, the social cues around us
can influence what we do
and even what we eat.
Here's a question for you Dan.
If I want to avoid this kind of bias,
do you think it makes sense for me to decide
what I'm going to order before the waiter
actually shows up at my table?
Absolutely.
There's a lot of evidence in eating and even in other kinds of behaviors that when we
make better decisions, when we make them in advance, rather than at that moment of truth
when the triple brownie explosion melt is staring us in the face.
I like that because of course there's all this research showing that we make better decisions
for our future cells and so I'm going to tell you right now Dan, I'm going to stick to
my next 60 second deadline on my next stop what science segment.
Okay well I'm going to set the timer and it's going off right now.
Alright this is a study that makes me very happy.
If you're in a diet should you allow yourself to cheat?
The rational answer is no. The hidden
brain answer is yes. A study in the Journal of Consumer Psychology finds that
when diners are told they can have a day off each week from their diets, when
they can eat whatever they want, this is a day of planned cheating. They did
just as well when it came to losing weight as diners who didn't give themselves
any room to cheat. Even better, the dieters who cheated reported being happier with their diets
and maybe would stick to them much longer.
The researchers have a wonderful academic euphemism
to describe this kind of cheating.
They call these hedonic deviations.
Nice.
The important thing to remember here
is that the cheating has to be planned and deliberate.
Most diets end with a crash,
and when you crash, you feel like you failed.
When you plan your hedonic deviations, it's not a crash, it's just a control
landing before you take off again. It puts you in charge, makes you happier,
might have long-term health benefits.
Yeah, that's quite fascinating. I actually think that some of it also has to do
with autonomy. That when you're on a diet you're very controlled.
And so if you have this escape valve where you you're in control, just for one day,
that can probably make you feel better
and probably boost adherence.
I also love the idea of the hedonic deviation.
I think that I like to consider stopwatch science,
a hedonic deviation in the lives of American listeners.
I tell you what, I think I'm gonna stick to my time better
the next time Dan.
If occasionally, maybe once every two weeks, you give me two minutes.
Okay, we can have a cheat day for stopwatch science.
Alright, so there you have it, buy a big table and cut your food into tiny pieces. Be mindful of your eating companions, or, as Dan would put it, eat with men, not women. Eat a big breakfast, not a big dinner, tell kids vegetables
are tasty and not very healthy. Have a rule of thumb when you go to a restaurant, one
drink, one entre. And if you're going on a diet, plan on indulging yourself once in a
while. Danping, thank you for joining me on Stopwatch Science.
Always a pleasure, Shrunker. The Hidden Brain podcast is produced by Karam Agar-Kalasin, Maggie Pennman and Max Nestrak.
Find more Hidden Brain on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram and hear my stories on your
local public radio station.
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