Fighting the
crave for fattening food? Just surround yourself in its scent
University of South Florida (USF
Innovation)
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A new study published in the Journal
of Marketing Research finds ambient food scent can directly satisfy
the belly. That's because the brain doesn't necessarily differentiate the
source of sensory pleasure.
"Ambient scent can be a
powerful tool to resist cravings for indulgent foods," said lead author
Dipayan Biswas, PhD, marketing professor at the University of South Florida
College of Business.
"In fact, subtle sensory stimuli like scents can be more effective in influencing children's and adults' food choices than restrictive policies."
"In fact, subtle sensory stimuli like scents can be more effective in influencing children's and adults' food choices than restrictive policies."
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He found participants exposed to the
smell of cookies for less than 30 seconds were more likely to want a cookie.
But those exposed for longer than two minutes, didn't find that cookie desirable, and picked strawberries instead. He had the same results when the scent of pizza and apples were tested.
But those exposed for longer than two minutes, didn't find that cookie desirable, and picked strawberries instead. He had the same results when the scent of pizza and apples were tested.
Since non-indulgent foods don't give off much of an ambient scent, they're typically not connected with reward, therefore have little influence on what we order.
Biswas's previous research has shown
light and the volume of music impacts food choice. However, this the first
study to prove one sense can compensate another.