The influence of supraliminal priming on energy density of food selection: a randomised control trial

Abstract Background Many people exercise because they know it is good for their health. Although this is true, it can make us feel deserving of a reward and lead us to eat more indulgent, less healthy food than if we had not done any exercise. Generally, lower energy-dense (LED) foods are recognised...

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Main Authors: Isabelle Schlegel, Sharon A. Carstairs, Gozde Ozakinci
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-03-01
Series:BMC Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-021-00554-1
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spelling doaj-dfdedae1e37c4ba482a7318d3a2f1aea2021-03-28T11:06:03ZengBMCBMC Psychology2050-72832021-03-01911910.1186/s40359-021-00554-1The influence of supraliminal priming on energy density of food selection: a randomised control trialIsabelle Schlegel0Sharon A. Carstairs1Gozde Ozakinci2School of Medicine, University of St AndrewsSchool of Medicine, University of St AndrewsSchool of Medicine, University of St AndrewsAbstract Background Many people exercise because they know it is good for their health. Although this is true, it can make us feel deserving of a reward and lead us to eat more indulgent, less healthy food than if we had not done any exercise. Generally, lower energy-dense (LED) foods are recognised as healthier choices than higher energy-dense (HED) options. Despite our intention to make healthy choices, seeing tempting higher-calorie foods on offer often side-tracks us. Priming is a psychological tool that makes specific changes to our environment that remind us of our motivation to be healthy. This makes it easier to choose a healthier option, by nudging us towards it without us even realising. However, it is currently unclear which method of priming achieves the best results. Aims Our study explores whether priming people to expect they will receive LED food leads them to make this healthier choice after exercise, even when also offered tempting less healthy HED foods at the moment of selection. Methods Our study observed the foods selected by university athletes after their sports matches. Before the match, half of the participants were primed by asking them to choose a LED snack from the options we offered, which they would receive after the match. The remaining half of participants were not asked this same question. To distract the athletes from our observation of their food choices, participants completed a task prior to choosing their snack, which was disguised as a ‘thank you’ for taking part. Results Overall, we found the priming group did not choose LED foods significantly more than the control group, hence priming did not increase LED food selection. Conclusion Importantly, our results indicate that priming must be more noticeable to achieve its goal. Additionally, we demonstrated that priming may be less successful for young athletic individuals, compared to older and more overweight adults recruited in other studies. This highlights the importance of studying a broader demographic range of individuals from the general population. We support future research into this area, which will help us to tweak priming to achieve the best outcomes. Trial registration ISRCTN Registry, ISRCTN74601698. Date registered: 02/10/2020 (retrospectively registered).https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-021-00554-1Compensatory eatingEnergy densityExercisePrimingVisual cues
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Isabelle Schlegel
Sharon A. Carstairs
Gozde Ozakinci
spellingShingle Isabelle Schlegel
Sharon A. Carstairs
Gozde Ozakinci
The influence of supraliminal priming on energy density of food selection: a randomised control trial
BMC Psychology
Compensatory eating
Energy density
Exercise
Priming
Visual cues
author_facet Isabelle Schlegel
Sharon A. Carstairs
Gozde Ozakinci
author_sort Isabelle Schlegel
title The influence of supraliminal priming on energy density of food selection: a randomised control trial
title_short The influence of supraliminal priming on energy density of food selection: a randomised control trial
title_full The influence of supraliminal priming on energy density of food selection: a randomised control trial
title_fullStr The influence of supraliminal priming on energy density of food selection: a randomised control trial
title_full_unstemmed The influence of supraliminal priming on energy density of food selection: a randomised control trial
title_sort influence of supraliminal priming on energy density of food selection: a randomised control trial
publisher BMC
series BMC Psychology
issn 2050-7283
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Background Many people exercise because they know it is good for their health. Although this is true, it can make us feel deserving of a reward and lead us to eat more indulgent, less healthy food than if we had not done any exercise. Generally, lower energy-dense (LED) foods are recognised as healthier choices than higher energy-dense (HED) options. Despite our intention to make healthy choices, seeing tempting higher-calorie foods on offer often side-tracks us. Priming is a psychological tool that makes specific changes to our environment that remind us of our motivation to be healthy. This makes it easier to choose a healthier option, by nudging us towards it without us even realising. However, it is currently unclear which method of priming achieves the best results. Aims Our study explores whether priming people to expect they will receive LED food leads them to make this healthier choice after exercise, even when also offered tempting less healthy HED foods at the moment of selection. Methods Our study observed the foods selected by university athletes after their sports matches. Before the match, half of the participants were primed by asking them to choose a LED snack from the options we offered, which they would receive after the match. The remaining half of participants were not asked this same question. To distract the athletes from our observation of their food choices, participants completed a task prior to choosing their snack, which was disguised as a ‘thank you’ for taking part. Results Overall, we found the priming group did not choose LED foods significantly more than the control group, hence priming did not increase LED food selection. Conclusion Importantly, our results indicate that priming must be more noticeable to achieve its goal. Additionally, we demonstrated that priming may be less successful for young athletic individuals, compared to older and more overweight adults recruited in other studies. This highlights the importance of studying a broader demographic range of individuals from the general population. We support future research into this area, which will help us to tweak priming to achieve the best outcomes. Trial registration ISRCTN Registry, ISRCTN74601698. Date registered: 02/10/2020 (retrospectively registered).
topic Compensatory eating
Energy density
Exercise
Priming
Visual cues
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-021-00554-1
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