Look before you eat: Junk food almost twice as distracting as healthy food | Health - Hindustan Times
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Look before you eat: Junk food almost twice as distracting as healthy food

Press Trust of India, Washington | By
Oct 29, 2017 08:33 AM IST

Researchers found that after eating the chocolate, people were not distracted by the high-fat, high-calorie food images any more than by healthy foods or other pictures.

Can’t resist that juicy burger? Fatty and sugary food such as doughnuts and pizzas are almost twice as distracting as healthy food until you have eaten some of it, according to a study. The study, published in the journal Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, underscored people’s implicit bias for fatty, sugary foods.

Fatty and sugary food such as doughnuts and pizzas are almost twice as distracting as healthy food until you have eaten some of it, according to a study.(Shutterstock)
Fatty and sugary food such as doughnuts and pizzas are almost twice as distracting as healthy food until you have eaten some of it, according to a study.(Shutterstock)

Researchers at Johns Hopkins University in the US created a complicated computer task, in which food was irrelevant, and asked a group of participants to find the answers as quickly as possible. As the participants worked diligently, pictures flashed in the periphery of the screen - visible only for 125 milliseconds, which is too quick for people to fully realise what they just saw. The pictures were a mix of images of high-fat, high- calorie foods, healthy foods, or items that were not food.

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Researchers noted that all of the pictures distracted people from the task, but found that items like doughnuts, potato chips, cheese and candy were about twice as distracting.

The healthy food pictures - like carrots, apples and salads - were no more distracting to people than non-foods like bicycles, lava lamps and footballs, researchers said.The team then recreated the experiment, but had a new group of participants eat two fun-sized candy bars before starting the computer work.

Researchers found that after eating the chocolate, people were not distracted by the high-fat, high-calorie food images any more than by healthy foods or other pictures. “We wanted to see if pictures of food, particularly high-fat, high-calorie food, would be a distraction for people engaged in a complicated task,” said Howard Egeth, professor at Johns Hopkins University.

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