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Effect of snack-food proximity on intake in general population samples with higher and lower cognitive resource

OBJECTIVE: Placing snack-food further away from people consistently decreases its consumption (“proximity effect”). However, given diet-related health inequalities, it is important to know whether interventions that alter food proximity have potential to change behaviour regardless of cognitive reso...

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Autores principales: Hunter, Jennifer A., Hollands, Gareth J., Couturier, Dominique-Laurent, Marteau, Theresa M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Academic Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5768324/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29183701
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2017.11.101
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author Hunter, Jennifer A.
Hollands, Gareth J.
Couturier, Dominique-Laurent
Marteau, Theresa M.
author_facet Hunter, Jennifer A.
Hollands, Gareth J.
Couturier, Dominique-Laurent
Marteau, Theresa M.
author_sort Hunter, Jennifer A.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Placing snack-food further away from people consistently decreases its consumption (“proximity effect”). However, given diet-related health inequalities, it is important to know whether interventions that alter food proximity have potential to change behaviour regardless of cognitive resource (capacity for self-control). This is often lower in those in lower socio-economic positions, who also tend to have less healthy diet-related behaviours. Study 1 aims to replicate the proximity effect in a general population sample and estimate whether trait-level cognitive resource moderates the effect. In a stronger test, Study 2 investigates whether the effect is similar regardless of manipulated state-level cognitive resource. METHOD: Participants were recruited into two laboratory studies (Study 1: n = 159; Study 2: n = 246). A bowl of an unhealthy snack was positioned near (20 cm) or far (70 cm) from the participant, as randomised. In Study 2, participants were further randomised to a cognitive load intervention. The pre-specified primary outcome was the proportion of participants taking any of the snack. RESULTS: Significantly fewer participants took the snack when far compared with near in Study 2 (57.7% vs 70.7%, β = −1.63, p = 0.020), but not in Study 1 (53.8% vs 63.3%, X(2) = 1.12, p = 0.289). Removing participants who moved the bowl (i.e. who did not adhere to protocol), increased the effect-sizes: Study 1: 39.3% vs 63.9%, X(2) = 6.43, p = 0.011; Study 2: 56.0% vs 73.9%, β = -2.46, p = 0.003. Effects were not moderated by cognitive resource. CONCLUSIONS: These studies provide the most robust evidence to date that placing food further away reduces likelihood of consumption in general population samples, an effect unlikely to be moderated by cognitive resource. This indicates potential for interventions altering food proximity to contribute to addressing health inequalities, but requires testing in real-world settings. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Both studies were registered with ISRCTN (Study 1 reference no.: ISRCTN46995850, Study 2 reference no.: ISRCTN14239872).
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spelling pubmed-57683242018-02-01 Effect of snack-food proximity on intake in general population samples with higher and lower cognitive resource Hunter, Jennifer A. Hollands, Gareth J. Couturier, Dominique-Laurent Marteau, Theresa M. Appetite Article OBJECTIVE: Placing snack-food further away from people consistently decreases its consumption (“proximity effect”). However, given diet-related health inequalities, it is important to know whether interventions that alter food proximity have potential to change behaviour regardless of cognitive resource (capacity for self-control). This is often lower in those in lower socio-economic positions, who also tend to have less healthy diet-related behaviours. Study 1 aims to replicate the proximity effect in a general population sample and estimate whether trait-level cognitive resource moderates the effect. In a stronger test, Study 2 investigates whether the effect is similar regardless of manipulated state-level cognitive resource. METHOD: Participants were recruited into two laboratory studies (Study 1: n = 159; Study 2: n = 246). A bowl of an unhealthy snack was positioned near (20 cm) or far (70 cm) from the participant, as randomised. In Study 2, participants were further randomised to a cognitive load intervention. The pre-specified primary outcome was the proportion of participants taking any of the snack. RESULTS: Significantly fewer participants took the snack when far compared with near in Study 2 (57.7% vs 70.7%, β = −1.63, p = 0.020), but not in Study 1 (53.8% vs 63.3%, X(2) = 1.12, p = 0.289). Removing participants who moved the bowl (i.e. who did not adhere to protocol), increased the effect-sizes: Study 1: 39.3% vs 63.9%, X(2) = 6.43, p = 0.011; Study 2: 56.0% vs 73.9%, β = -2.46, p = 0.003. Effects were not moderated by cognitive resource. CONCLUSIONS: These studies provide the most robust evidence to date that placing food further away reduces likelihood of consumption in general population samples, an effect unlikely to be moderated by cognitive resource. This indicates potential for interventions altering food proximity to contribute to addressing health inequalities, but requires testing in real-world settings. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Both studies were registered with ISRCTN (Study 1 reference no.: ISRCTN46995850, Study 2 reference no.: ISRCTN14239872). Academic Press 2018-02-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5768324/ /pubmed/29183701 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2017.11.101 Text en © 2017 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hunter, Jennifer A.
Hollands, Gareth J.
Couturier, Dominique-Laurent
Marteau, Theresa M.
Effect of snack-food proximity on intake in general population samples with higher and lower cognitive resource
title Effect of snack-food proximity on intake in general population samples with higher and lower cognitive resource
title_full Effect of snack-food proximity on intake in general population samples with higher and lower cognitive resource
title_fullStr Effect of snack-food proximity on intake in general population samples with higher and lower cognitive resource
title_full_unstemmed Effect of snack-food proximity on intake in general population samples with higher and lower cognitive resource
title_short Effect of snack-food proximity on intake in general population samples with higher and lower cognitive resource
title_sort effect of snack-food proximity on intake in general population samples with higher and lower cognitive resource
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5768324/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29183701
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2017.11.101
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