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We report a study designed to investigate the influence of the weight of the container on expected satiety prior to tasting the food within and on the perceived density of the food and any feelings of fullness expected to follow consumption (expected satiation). The results demonstrate that the contents of a heavier container are expected to be more satiating than when exactly the same contents are presented in a visually-identical, but physically lighter, container (even before the food has been tasted). In addition, we were able to validate a "weight-density" illusion, since the weight of the container was shown to influence the perceived density of the sample. Put simply, the heavier the container, the denser the food sample was perceived to be.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.appet.2011.12.021

Type

Journal article

Journal

Appetite

Publication Date

04/2012

Volume

58

Pages

559 - 562

Keywords

Adult, Feeding Behavior, Female, Food, Food Packaging, Food Preferences, Humans, Male, Perception, Satiation