Newswise, February 10, 2016– A cluttered and chaotic kitchen
can often cause out-of-control stressful feelings. It might also cause
something else — increased snacking of indulgent treats.
A new Cornell University study explored how a noisy,
disruptive and disorganized environment influences how much women eat.
Researchers at the Cornell Food and Brand Lab found that the combination of
stress and a messy environment leads to more snacking and an increase in the
number of calories consumed.
“We found the more cluttered and confusing an environment was,
the more people ate,” says co-author Brian Wansink, the John S. Dyson Professor
of Marketing in the Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management
and director of the Food and Brand Lab.
“It made them anxious, and when they
got anxious, they ended up eating more cookies.”
But the news is not all discouraging for those with
less-than-tidy kitchen space: a relaxed mindset can help reduce the pressure to
overeat, counteracting the influence of a chaotic space.
For the study, 98 women were split among two different kitchen
environments: one organized and quiet with no disruptions, and the other a
“chaotic” kitchen full of disorganized tables, disheveled papers, and dishes
scattered around.
In order to prime a certain mindset from participants, the
researchers gave each person five minutes to complete one of three writing
tasks. The prompts asked the women to either write about a time in their lives
when they either felt organized and in control, or an opposite time when they
were stressed. A third prompt considered a neutral condition.
Following the writing exercise, researchers provided bowls of
carrots, crackers and cookies and asked the women to complete a taste survey,
after which they were told to eat as much as they wanted.
Researchers discovered that stressed-out participants consumed
twice as many cookies in a messy kitchen compared to those who ate in a quiet,
organized space without disruption.
“Being in a chaotic environment and feeling out of control is
bad for diets. It seems to lead people to think, ‘Everything else is out of
control, so why shouldn’t I be?’” says lead author Lenny Vartanian, a former
postdoctoral associate at the Food and Brand Lab and current associate
professor of psychology at the University of New South Wales in Australia.
But there is hope for those who can’t seem to keep their
kitchen clear.
The researchers found that those who felt less stress weren’t as
influenced by a messy environment.
After writing about a time when they were
felt organized and in control of their lives, women ate about 50 percent less
than those who were stressed. The researchers concluded that taking a moment to
recall a more controlled time in one’s life can help women resist the pressure
to overeat.
“Although meditation, as a way of feeling in control, might be
one way to resist kitchen snacking for some, it’s probably easier just to keep
our kitchens picked up and cleaned up,” Wansink says.
While the research focused on women, Vartanian says, “I
suspect the same would hold with males.”
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