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鶹Ƶ Study Shows How Optical Illusions May Help Fight Obesity

It’s that nagging question you ask yourself every Thanksgiving after you have piled the food sky-high on your plate and savored every last morsel: “What happened? Were my eyes bigger than my stomach?”

For many years, doctors and dieticians have focused on overeating as part of the reason for the obesity epidemic in America.鶹Ƶ researchers study how building the Ebbinghaus illusion and the Delboeuf illusion into a plate can impact the amount of food that people choose to put on their plate.

There is sound science behind the predisposition to fill our plates with what we think is a reasonable portion, only to find ourselves overeating anyway. However, a new study by 鶹Ƶ researchers aims to help us use the tricks that our eyes play on us to combat our overeating habits.

While the in its dietary guidelines, including the use of portion-control plates, many people still struggle to learn the healthy portion sizes and consistently consume beyond those amounts. Prior to the , published in the health journal BMC Obesity, little research had evaluated the dishes specifically designed for portion control.

“The goal of the study was to learn if building an optical illusion into a plate would help people choose smaller portions,” says Joel Hughes, Ph.D., professor of psychological sciences in 鶹Ƶ’s College of Arts and Sciences.

The plate uses two types of optical illusions. The Ebbinghaus illusion gives the impression that something is larger or smaller in contrast to shapes surrounding it; a circle surrounded by smaller circles will look larger than it is. The Delboeuf illusion is 鶹Ƶ researchers study how optical illusions on a specially designed plate help people choose smaller portions, which could lead to eating less calories and ultimately losing weight.similar, but it skews our perception of an object’s size in relation to its distance from a border. If the gap between the object and border is narrow, we perceive the object larger; but if the gap is wider, we perceive the object as smaller. In combination, these illusions make food look bigger and might help people lose weight over time.

“The plate produced smaller self-selected servings in both studies,” Hughes says.

Hughes says the team has conducted a number of studies using the portion-control plate, and hopes to pursue manufacturing options to make the plate commercially available. He says future studies using the dish should include a broader age range and clinical trials of portion-control dishes for weight loss.

For more information about 鶹Ƶ’s Department of Psychological Sciences, visit .

POSTED: Wednesday, September 6, 2017 12:34 PM
Updated: Thursday, December 8, 2022 11:01 PM
WRITTEN BY:
Dan Pompili

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