Centre des Sciences du Goût et de l'Alimentation, AgroSup Dijon, CNRS, INRAE, Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté, F-21000, Dijon, France.
INSEAD, Sorbonne Université Behavioural Lab., F-77300, Fontainebleau, France.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2020 Jun 1;17(1):70. doi: 10.1186/s12966-020-00974-z.
Large portion sizes encourage overconsumption. Prior studies suggest that this may be due to errors in anticipating the effects of portion size, although the studies were limited to adults and energy-dense foods.
Our aim was to investigate potential anticipation errors related to the effects of portion size on hunger, eating enjoyment, and healthiness ratings among 8-to-11-year-old children, for snacks differing in energy density and healthiness perception, and as a function of initial hunger.
In a within-subject design, 83 children aged 8 to 11 years old were first asked to anticipate how much they would enjoy, how hungry they would feel after eating, and how healthy it would be to eat a recommended serving size, a 50% larger portion, and a 125% larger portion of brownie or applesauce. Over six subsequent sessions, the children were asked to eat all of each of these portions and then rate their post-intake enjoyment, residual hunger, and healthiness perceptions. We also measured hunger at the beginning of each session.
For both snacks, larger portions reduced anticipated and experienced residual hunger similarly. In contrast, larger portions increased anticipated but not experienced eating enjoyment for both snacks; although larger portions increased anticipated and experienced enjoyment ratings among extremely hungry children. All children under-anticipated how much they would enjoy the smaller portion sizes. Healthiness ratings were unaffected by portion size for both snacks but differed across foods (applesauce vs. brownie).
Children anticipate the effects of portion size on hunger change accurately, overestimate the effects of portion size on eating enjoyment, and rate food healthiness on food type and not portion size. Helping children better anticipate the enjoyment from smaller (recommended) portion sizes and understand that food quantity, not just quality, matters for healthy eating may be a solution to improve portion control.
食物份量大会导致过量进食。先前的研究表明,这可能是由于人们在预估份量大小的影响时出现了错误,尽管这些研究仅限于成年人和高能量食物。
我们旨在研究 8 至 11 岁儿童在不同能量密度和健康感知的零食中,以及初始饥饿程度的影响下,与份量大小对饥饿感、进食享受感和健康感知相关的潜在预估错误。
在一项个体内设计中,首先要求 83 名 8 至 11 岁的儿童预估他们会享受多少、进食后会感到多饿以及进食推荐份量、半份增量和一份增量的布朗尼或苹果酱会有多健康。在随后的六次会议中,要求孩子们吃完所有这些份量,并在吃完后评估他们的进食享受感、剩余饥饿感和健康感知。我们还在每次会议开始时测量饥饿感。
对于两种零食,较大的份量同样减少了预期和实际剩余饥饿感。相比之下,较大的份量增加了对两种零食的预期但未增加实际的进食享受感;尽管较大的份量增加了极度饥饿儿童的预期和实际享受感评分。所有儿童都低估了他们会享受较小份量的程度。对于两种零食,份量大小对健康感知没有影响,但不同食物之间存在差异(苹果酱与布朗尼)。
儿童能准确预估份量大小对饥饿感变化的影响,高估了份量大小对进食享受感的影响,并且根据食物类型而不是份量大小来评价食物的健康程度。帮助儿童更好地预估较小(推荐)份量的享受感,并理解食物数量而非质量对健康饮食很重要,可能是改善份量控制的一种解决方案。