Avoiding hunger or attaining fullness? Implicit goals of satiety guide portion selection and food intake patterns

Although implicit theories have been studied in the context of personal traits, there has been limited investigation of their role in physiological domains such as appetite. Subjective feelings and affective states can function as goals and desired end states that individuals regulate their behavior...

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Main Authors: Cheon, Bobby Kyungbeom, Sim, A. Y., Lee, L., Forde, C. G.
Other Authors: School of Social Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142936
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1429362021-01-28T07:19:09Z Avoiding hunger or attaining fullness? Implicit goals of satiety guide portion selection and food intake patterns Cheon, Bobby Kyungbeom Sim, A. Y. Lee, L. Forde, C. G. School of Social Sciences Singapore Institute for Clinical Sciences, A*STAR Social sciences::Psychology Satiety Goals Implicit Theories Although implicit theories have been studied in the context of personal traits, there has been limited investigation of their role in physiological domains such as appetite. Subjective feelings and affective states can function as goals and desired end states that individuals regulate their behaviors to attain. Likewise, different conceptualizations people maintain for the subjective experience of satiety (i.e., terminating hunger or attaining fullness) may also predict individual variations in eating behavior. We examined whether portion selection and food intake were guided by such implicit goals pertaining to the nature of satiety. Across 3 studies, we observed that individuals report distinct subjective requirements (degrees of fullness) to attain different states of satiety (stop hunger, feel comfortably full, feel completely full), suggesting that these states reflect independent goals or outcomes. Importantly, personal requirements to feel completely full (compared to stop hunger or feel comfortably full) were observed to be the strongest predictor of portion sizes selected in Study 1 (B = 1.17, p < .001) and Study 2 (B = 4.26, p = .004), and the quantity of energy consumed from a meal in Study 2 (B = 3.07, p = .01). Yet, experimentally activating a situational goal to stop hunger (vs. feel full) produced the selection of smaller portion sizes, F(1, 41) = 5.64, p = .02, and personal requirements to stop hunger to become the dominant predictor of portion selection patterns in Study 3 (B = 0.43, p = .005). These findings reveal that eating behaviors of modern consumers may be guided by a predominant goal to attain the subjective experience of complete fullness, although this implicit goal may be malleable to situational demands. Accepted version 2020-07-14T02:56:02Z 2020-07-14T02:56:02Z 2019 Journal Article Cheon, B. K., Sim, A. Y., Lee, L., & Forde, C. G. (2019). Avoiding hunger or attaining fullness? Implicit goals of satiety guide portion selection and food intake patterns. Appetite, 138, 10-16. doi:10.1016/j.appet.2019.03.003 0195-6663 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142936 10.1016/j.appet.2019.03.003 30851312 2-s2.0-85062819154 138 10 16 en Appetite © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. This paper was published in Appetite and is made available with permission of Elsevier Ltd. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
Satiety Goals
Implicit Theories
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Satiety Goals
Implicit Theories
Cheon, Bobby Kyungbeom
Sim, A. Y.
Lee, L.
Forde, C. G.
Avoiding hunger or attaining fullness? Implicit goals of satiety guide portion selection and food intake patterns
description Although implicit theories have been studied in the context of personal traits, there has been limited investigation of their role in physiological domains such as appetite. Subjective feelings and affective states can function as goals and desired end states that individuals regulate their behaviors to attain. Likewise, different conceptualizations people maintain for the subjective experience of satiety (i.e., terminating hunger or attaining fullness) may also predict individual variations in eating behavior. We examined whether portion selection and food intake were guided by such implicit goals pertaining to the nature of satiety. Across 3 studies, we observed that individuals report distinct subjective requirements (degrees of fullness) to attain different states of satiety (stop hunger, feel comfortably full, feel completely full), suggesting that these states reflect independent goals or outcomes. Importantly, personal requirements to feel completely full (compared to stop hunger or feel comfortably full) were observed to be the strongest predictor of portion sizes selected in Study 1 (B = 1.17, p < .001) and Study 2 (B = 4.26, p = .004), and the quantity of energy consumed from a meal in Study 2 (B = 3.07, p = .01). Yet, experimentally activating a situational goal to stop hunger (vs. feel full) produced the selection of smaller portion sizes, F(1, 41) = 5.64, p = .02, and personal requirements to stop hunger to become the dominant predictor of portion selection patterns in Study 3 (B = 0.43, p = .005). These findings reveal that eating behaviors of modern consumers may be guided by a predominant goal to attain the subjective experience of complete fullness, although this implicit goal may be malleable to situational demands.
author2 School of Social Sciences
author_facet School of Social Sciences
Cheon, Bobby Kyungbeom
Sim, A. Y.
Lee, L.
Forde, C. G.
format Article
author Cheon, Bobby Kyungbeom
Sim, A. Y.
Lee, L.
Forde, C. G.
author_sort Cheon, Bobby Kyungbeom
title Avoiding hunger or attaining fullness? Implicit goals of satiety guide portion selection and food intake patterns
title_short Avoiding hunger or attaining fullness? Implicit goals of satiety guide portion selection and food intake patterns
title_full Avoiding hunger or attaining fullness? Implicit goals of satiety guide portion selection and food intake patterns
title_fullStr Avoiding hunger or attaining fullness? Implicit goals of satiety guide portion selection and food intake patterns
title_full_unstemmed Avoiding hunger or attaining fullness? Implicit goals of satiety guide portion selection and food intake patterns
title_sort avoiding hunger or attaining fullness? implicit goals of satiety guide portion selection and food intake patterns
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142936
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