Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Liverpool, L69 7ZA, UK.
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Liverpool, L69 7ZA, UK; Centre for Behavioural Research in Cancer, Cancer Council Victoria, Melbourne, Australia.
Appetite. 2021 Apr 1;159:105047. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2020.105047. Epub 2020 Nov 20.
Portion size impacts on the amount of energy consumed during a meal. However, research findings on participant characteristics that moderate the effect of portion size on energy intake are mixed. Using data pooled across three randomized control trials, we examined the impact of reducing meal portion size on meal energy intake in 111 adult participants varying in sex (55 M, 56 F), body weight (BMI range = 19-42) and a broad range of participant characteristics, including usual portion size, restrained, emotional and external eating, satiety responsiveness, plate clearing tendencies, concerns about wasting food and self-control. In each trial, a repeated-measures design was used and participants consumed three ad-libitum lunchtime meals differing in portion size; large-normal portion size condition (100%) vs. small-normal portion size condition (~ 75%) vs. smaller than normal portion size condition (~ 50%). In mixed ANOVAs, we did not find convincing evidence that any participant characteristic reliably moderated the impact that reducing portion size had on energy intake. For the majority of participants energy intake decreased when portion size was reduced and it was more common for participants to consistently reduce their energy intake than consume a similar amount when portion size was reduced. We also found little evidence that a sub-group of participants existed whose energy intake was consistently resistant to portion size reductions. Portion size may be a universal driver of energy intake, as reducing meal portion size appears to decrease meal energy intake among most people. Food portion downsizing may therefore be an equitable intervention approach to reducing population level energy intake.
食物份量会影响用餐时消耗的能量。然而,关于份量大小对能量摄入影响的调节因素的研究结果却参差不齐。我们使用三项随机对照试验的数据进行综合分析,研究了减少餐份大小对 111 名成年参与者的用餐能量摄入的影响,这些参与者在性别(男性 55 人,女性 56 人)、体重(BMI 范围为 19-42)以及广泛的参与者特征方面存在差异,包括通常的份量大小、限制进食、情绪化进食和外部进食、饱腹感反应、清盘倾向、对浪费食物的关注和自我控制。在每项试验中,都采用了重复测量设计,参与者食用三种份量大小不同的随意午餐;正常大份量条件(100%)、正常小份量条件(75%)和小于正常份量条件(50%)。在混合方差分析中,我们没有发现令人信服的证据表明任何参与者特征可靠地调节了减少份量大小对能量摄入的影响。对于大多数参与者来说,当份量减少时,能量摄入会减少,而当份量减少时,参与者更常见的是持续减少能量摄入,而不是摄入相似的量。我们也几乎没有证据表明存在一个参与者亚组,其能量摄入始终不受份量大小减少的影响。份量大小可能是能量摄入的普遍驱动因素,因为减少餐份大小似乎会降低大多数人的餐食能量摄入。因此,减少食物份量可能是一种公平的干预措施,可以降低人群的能量摄入。