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Effects of meal variety on expected satiation : evidence for a 'perceived volume' heuristic

Keenan, GS; Brunstrom, JM; Ferriday, D

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Authors

GS Keenan

JM Brunstrom

D Ferriday



Abstract

Meal variety has been shown to increase energy intake in humans by an average of 29%. Historically, research exploring the mechanism underlying this effect has focused on physiological and psychological processes that terminate a meal (e.g., sensory-specific satiety). We sought to explore whether meal variety stimulates intake by influencing pre-meal planning. We know that individuals use prior experience with a food to estimate the extent to which it will deliver fullness. These ‘expected satiation’ judgments may be straightforward when only one meal component needs to be considered, but it remains unclear how prospective satiation is estimated when a meal comprises multiple items. We hypothesised that people simplify the task by using a heuristic, or ‘cognitive shortcut.’ Specifically, as within-meal variety increases, expected satiation tends to be based on the perceived volume of food(s) rather than on prior experience. In each trial, participants (N = 68) were shown a plate of food with six buffet food items. Across trials the number of different foods varied in the range one to six. In separate tasks, the participants provided an estimate of their combined expected satiation and volume. When meal variety was high, judgments of perceived volume and expected satiation ‘converged.’ This is consistent with a common underlying response strategy. By contrast, the low variety meals produced dissociable responses, suggesting that judgments of expected satiation were not governed solely by perceived volume. This evidence for a ‘volume heuristic’ was especially clear in people who were less familiar with the meal items. Together, these results are important because they expose a novel process by which meal variety might increase food intake in humans.

Citation

Keenan, G., Brunstrom, J., & Ferriday, D. (2015). Effects of meal variety on expected satiation : evidence for a 'perceived volume' heuristic. Appetite, 89, 10-15. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2015.01.010

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 14, 2015
Online Publication Date Jan 16, 2015
Publication Date Jun 1, 2015
Deposit Date Jun 30, 2020
Publicly Available Date Jun 30, 2020
Journal Appetite
Print ISSN 0195-6663
Publisher Elsevier
Volume 89
Pages 10-15
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2015.01.010
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2015.01.010
Related Public URLs https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/appetite

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