A nudge in a healthier direction: How environmental cues help restrained eaters pursue their weight-control goal

Appetite. 2017 Mar 1:110:94-102. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2016.11.037. Epub 2016 Nov 30.

Abstract

Losing weight is a goal for many people, but it is hard to pursue. However, dieting cues in the environment hold promise for improving individuals' eating behavior. For example, exposure to thin, human-like sculptures by the artist Alberto Giacometti has been found to promote healthy snack choices at a vending machine. Whether health- or weight-related processes drive such effects has not yet been determined. However, a detailed understanding of the content-related drivers of environmental cues' effects provides the first indications regarding a cue's possible use. Therefore, two laboratory studies were conducted. They examined the Giacometti sculptures' effects on unhealthy and healthy food intake (Study 1) and on the completion of weight- and health-related fragmented words (Study 2). Study 1 indicated that the sculptures are weight-related by showing that they reduced food intake independent of food healthiness. Furthermore, the "Giacometti effect" was moderated by restrained eating. Restrained eaters, who are known for their weight-control goal, ate less after having been exposed to the thin sculptures. The results of Study 2 pointed in the same direction. Restrained eaters completed more weight-related words after being exposed to the sculptures. Overall, these studies suggest that the thin sculptures are primarily weight-related cues and particularly helpful for restrained eaters. Environmental weight-control cues such as the Giacometti sculptures could act as a counterforce to our obesogenic environment and help restrained eaters pursue their weight-control goal. In this way, they could nudge food decisions in a healthier direction.

Keywords: Dieting; Environmental cue; Nudging; Restrained eating; Weight-control goal.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Choice Behavior
  • Cues*
  • Diet, Healthy / psychology*
  • Diet, Reducing / psychology*
  • Eating / psychology*
  • Environment
  • Female
  • Food Preferences / psychology*
  • Goals
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Sculpture / psychology
  • Young Adult