Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
Health

To Eat Less, Serve Food In Small Portions On Large Tables

IANS, 19 Jan, 2016 12:04 PM
    Does the size of a table matter when eating a slice of pizza?
     
    According to a new study, the size of a table has a significant impact on how people perceive the food that is placed upon it and consequently how much people eat it.
     
    "To eat less food, serve food in small portions and on large tables," recommends lead researcher Brennan Davis, associate professor at Orfalea College of Business, California, in US. 
     
    For the study, researchers divided four large round pizza pies of the same size into regular-sized slices (eighths) or smaller slices (sixteenths). 
     
    They then placed two pies on small tables that were just a little bigger than a pizza pie. 
     
    And they placed the other two pies on large tables that were much bigger than a pizza pie. 
     
    Thinking that smaller slices looked about half as big as regular ones, the participants at small tables took about twice as many. 
     
    In contrast, people at large tables paid more attention to how big the table was instead of how small the pizza slices were. 
     
    The large tables distracted them and they presumed the smaller slices were more regular in size, showed the findings, published in the Journal of the Association for Consumer Research.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Hypoventilation patients at risk during air travel

    Hypoventilation patients at risk during air travel
    Obese people who suffer from hypoventilation should be cautious while travelling via air....

    Hypoventilation patients at risk during air travel

    Immigrant kids in US at higher obesity risk

    Immigrant kids in US at higher obesity risk
    Immigrant kids in the US are more likely to grow obese than US-born Caucasian children, a study says....

    Immigrant kids in US at higher obesity risk

    Artificial anti-cancer molecules created in a jiffy

    Artificial anti-cancer molecules created in a jiffy
    In what could lead to new anti-cancer drugs, researchers have developed a new method to produce molecules that have a similar structure to peptides...

    Artificial anti-cancer molecules created in a jiffy

    Neuronal 'sweet spot' can curb obesity

    Neuronal 'sweet spot' can curb obesity
    Preventing weight gain, obesity and diabetes could be as simple as keeping a nuclear receptor from being activated in a small part of the brain, says a new study....

    Neuronal 'sweet spot' can curb obesity

    First molecular map to detect vision loss created

    First molecular map to detect vision loss created
    An Indian-origin researcher-led team has created the most detailed map to date of a region of the human eye, long associated with blinding diseases...

    First molecular map to detect vision loss created

    Revealed: Why brain tumours are more common in men

    Revealed: Why brain tumours are more common in men
    The absence of a protein known to reduce cancer risk can explain why brain tumours occur more often in males and are more harmful than similar tumours in females....

    Revealed: Why brain tumours are more common in men