How do you know when you’re full? (Bottomless Soup Bowl Study)
Manage episode 421049253 series 3481674
How do people know when they're full? It might be more complicated than simply listening to your body. Visual cues, such as seeing the number of bowls of soup you've eaten, may contribute to this phenomenon. We review the "Bottomless Soup Bowl" study (Wansink et al., 2005).
Follow-Up Research: What does the sound of a flute taste like? We surveyed people on what they thought the sounds of different instruments would taste like and present the results of our research.
It should be noted that much of the research conducted by Brian Wansink has either been retracted or called into question. This specific study has not been retracted but the results have been questioned. This doesn’t necessarily mean the effect isn’t real, rather we need more research to draw firmer conclusions. For a similar study with similar results, check out Episodic Memory and Appetite Regulation in Humans (Brunstrom et al., 2012).
Interested in seeing our faces and some visuals referenced in this episode? Check out the video version on YouTube.
Chapters
1. Introductions (00:00:00)
2. How do we figure out when we're full? (00:01:33)
3. Study setup of the bottomless soup bowl (00:05:04)
4. Results: Those with the self-refilling bowl ate more but didn't feel that way (00:08:34)
5. It's more about how much you believed you've eaten (00:09:30)
6. Fancy restaurants try to keep your hungrier (00:12:04)
7. Perceptions of prices on wine bottles (00:15:38)
8. FOLLOW-UP RESEARCH: What do the sounds of instruments taste like? (00:22:00)
9. Taste of a flute (00:23:57)
10. Taste of a violin (00:27:14)
11. Taste of a piano (00:29:39)
12. Taste of an acoustic guitar (00:30:49)
13. Taste of a saxophone (00:31:43)
14. Taste of a trumpet (00:32:36)
15. Taste of drums (00:33:37)
16. Breakdown of all instruments' taste profilesBreakdown of all instruments' taste profiles (00:34:36)
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