'The wisdom of crowds': a survey on the rating of nutritional values of meals in digital pictures.

IF 2.5 Q2 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
BMJ Nutrition, Prevention and Health Pub Date : 2025-06-20 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1136/bmjnph-2024-001162
Kathrin Gemesi, Sophie Laura Holzmann, Markus Böhm, Nadja Leipold, Hanna Hauptmann, Martin Lurz, Georg Groh, Hans Hauner, Helmut Krcmar, Christina Holzapfel
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Photo-based nutrition diaries might be useful to assess dietary intake without much effort and maybe even without nutrition expertise. This proof-of-concept study aimed to investigate the principle of 'the wisdom of crowds' by examining how accurately both nutrition experts and non-experts can rate nutritional values of meals presented in digital pictures.

Methods: An online survey was conducted among adults in Germany from 2016 to 2017. Participants rated a random selection of six meal pictures according to their nutritional values (energy, carbohydrates, sugar and fat content) and their healthiness. Rating results were compared with the nutritional value calculated by the German Nutrient Database or according to the manufacturer's information ('truth'). Descriptive statistical analysis, Mann-Whitney-U test and multiple linear regression analysis were performed using RStudio.

Results: In total, 110 (92.7 % women, mean age: 38.7±14.0 years) nutrition experts and 233 (31.3 % women, mean age: 21.2±2.6 years) non-experts participated. Overall meal pictures, experts overestimated the average content of all nutritional values (sugar: 3.8 %, energy: 4.9 %, carbohydrates: 4.9 % and fat: 10.4 %). Non-experts overestimated the average energy content by 10.4 %, fat content by 17.1 % and sugar content by 27.5%. The average carbohydrate content was underestimated by 9.0%. A statistically significant difference between the two crowds' ratings was found for energy (p=0.03), carbohydrates (p<0.001) and sugar (p<0.001), but not for fat (p=0.44). An increasing deviation of nutritional value ratings from the truth towards overrating was associated with decreasing rating of healthiness (all p<0.001).

Conclusion: This study suggests that both experts and non-experts rate nutritional values of meals in digital pictures in an appropriate manner, although both crowds occasionally deviated significantly from the truth, especially over-rating occurred with decreasing rating of healthiness. Due to the proof-of-concept approach and the limited generalisability of the results, the principle of 'the wisdom of crowds' is not fully supported. Studies with a large representative population are necessary. However, findings suggest that crowd-based meal picture ratings could be a method of digital dietary self-monitoring in combination with gamification elements.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

“人群的智慧”:一项关于数字图片中膳食营养价值评级的调查。
背景:以照片为基础的营养日记可能对评估膳食摄入量很有用,而不需要太多的努力,甚至可能不需要营养专家。这项概念验证性研究旨在通过检验营养专家和非专家如何准确地评估数字图片中膳食的营养价值,来调查“人群智慧”的原理。方法:2016 - 2017年对德国成年人进行在线调查。参与者根据营养价值(能量、碳水化合物、糖和脂肪含量)和健康状况,随机选择六张餐点图片进行评分。评级结果与德国营养数据库计算的营养价值或根据制造商的信息(“真相”)进行比较。使用RStudio进行描述性统计分析、Mann-Whitney-U检验和多元线性回归分析。结果:共有110名(92.7%为女性,平均年龄38.7±14.0岁)营养专家参与,233名(31.3%为女性,平均年龄21.2±2.6岁)非营养专家参与。总体膳食图,专家高估了所有营养价值的平均含量(糖:3.8%,能量:4.9%,碳水化合物:4.9%,脂肪:10.4%)。非专家对平均能量含量高估了10.4%,脂肪含量高估了17.1%,糖含量高估了27.5%。平均碳水化合物含量被低估了9.0%。结论:该研究表明,专家和非专家对数字图片中膳食营养价值的评价都是适当的,尽管两者偶尔会出现明显偏离事实的情况,特别是随着健康评分的降低,会出现高估的情况。由于概念验证方法和结果的有限通用性,“群体智慧”的原则没有得到充分支持。有必要对大量代表性人群进行研究。然而,研究结果表明,基于人群的膳食图片评级可能是一种结合游戏化元素的数字饮食自我监测方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BMJ Nutrition, Prevention and Health
BMJ Nutrition, Prevention and Health Nursing-Nutrition and Dietetics
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
34
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