Jonas Potthoff , Alice Polz , Dominique Annick Ulbrich , Florian Osmani , Anne Schienle
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For Study II, 200 participants took part in a quiz with questions focusing on either positive, negative, or neutral consequences of high vs. low sugar consumption. Participants evaluated their appetite and mood before and after all interventions (list, quiz) and additionally completed a visual probe task with images depicting high vs. low-sugar food.</p></div><div><h3>Results</h3><p>In Study I, the positive focus increased appetite for low-sugar food. The negative focus reduced participants' positive mood but did not change reported appetite. In Study II, all quiz conditions decreased appetite for high-sugar foods but did not affect mood. None of the interventions influenced visual attention to the food images.</p></div><div><h3>Conclusion</h3><p>Focusing on negative consequences of a high-sugar diet is less pleasant and is less effective in changing people's appetite than considering the positive aspects of a low-sugar diet. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景吃糖过多与许多负面健康影响有关。研究人员进行了两次简短的在线干预,以调查有关吃高糖食物的负面影响和吃低糖食物的正面影响的信息是否会改变报告的食欲、情绪和视觉食物线索注意力:两组被要求列出高糖饮食的负面影响(负面关注)或低糖饮食的正面影响(正面关注)。第三组则进行对照任务(写购物清单)。在 "研究二 "中,200 名参与者参加了一个小测验,测验问题主要集中在高糖和低糖消费的积极、消极或中性后果上。参与者在所有干预措施(清单、小测验)前后都对自己的食欲和情绪进行了评估,此外,他们还完成了一项视觉探测任务,任务中的图片描述了高糖与低糖食物的对比。消极焦点降低了参与者的积极情绪,但没有改变报告的食欲。在研究 II 中,所有测验条件都降低了对高糖食物的食欲,但没有影响情绪。结论与考虑低糖饮食的积极方面相比,关注高糖饮食的消极后果并不那么令人愉快,而且在改变人们食欲方面也不那么有效。因此,未来的干预措施应强调健康饮食的积极成果。
Consequences of positive vs. negative information concerning the amount of sugar consumption on appetite, mood, and visual food cue attention: Findings from two online interventions
Background
Eating too much sugar is associated with many negative health effects. Two brief online interventions were carried out to investigate whether information about the negative consequences of eating high-sugar food vs. positive consequences of eating low-sugar food can change reported appetite, mood, and visual food cue attention.
Method
For Study I, participants (n = 201) were allocated to one of three groups: Two groups were asked to list either the negative consequences of high-sugar consumption (negative focus) or the positive consequences of low-sugar consumption (positive focus). The third group carried out a control task (writing a shopping list). For Study II, 200 participants took part in a quiz with questions focusing on either positive, negative, or neutral consequences of high vs. low sugar consumption. Participants evaluated their appetite and mood before and after all interventions (list, quiz) and additionally completed a visual probe task with images depicting high vs. low-sugar food.
Results
In Study I, the positive focus increased appetite for low-sugar food. The negative focus reduced participants' positive mood but did not change reported appetite. In Study II, all quiz conditions decreased appetite for high-sugar foods but did not affect mood. None of the interventions influenced visual attention to the food images.
Conclusion
Focusing on negative consequences of a high-sugar diet is less pleasant and is less effective in changing people's appetite than considering the positive aspects of a low-sugar diet. Thus, future interventions should instead spotlight the positive outcomes of a healthy diet.