Eating Habits and Behaviors, (UMLS) Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Exposure to Food in Social Networks on Food Cravings and External Eating
Background: Food practices are socially, culturally and historically embedded in everyday
life. It is a common notion that people eat due to internal state of physiologic hunger but
in fact the drive behind eating behaviors is much more complex. We eat, inter alia, because
of our response to external cues such as the sight and smell of food, or external eating.
Another related concept is food cravings: intense irresistible desires to consume a
particular food that is distinct from hunger. Both external eating and food cravings have
been associated with impulsivity, eating disorders and obesity. During recent decades the
role of the media, and recently of the social media in our lives has grown significantly, and
their influence on culture and society is now huge. A common activities on social media sites
(SNS) is food viewing and posting pictures of tempting food, known as food porn. Food porn
has been found to correlate with eating patterns and food-related attention and reward bias.
The aim of this study is to conduct a controlled manipulation that may help us deduce
causality as well as association. The investigators postulate that (1) viewing pictures of
appetizing food will lead to higher rates of reported external eating and food craving than
viewing pictures that are not food related; (2) Viewing these appetizing food pictures will
lead participants to order different kinds of food and greater amounts; (3) The effect of
viewing food pictures on external eating, food cravings and food orders will be greater for
participants with high disturbed eating, then for participants without disturbed eating.
Method: After providing informed consent, 150 female participants (aged 18-35) will self
report on demographic variables, SNS food preoccupation and disturbed eating (EAT-26). They
will then be randomly assigned to watch either a food porn or control video. They will
complete measures of food cravings (FCQ-S) and external eating (DEBQ) after watching the
video and asked to order food they would like to eat from a virtual menu.)
Participants Approximately 150 young participants (aged 18-35) will be recruited using a
convenience sampling procedure. Participants will include Behavioral Science students at the
Ruppin Academic Center who will be given credit points in exchange for participation on the
stud, and young women recruited via social networks.
Measures Food cravings (state) will be assessed using the Food Craving Questionnaire (FCQ-S),
a self report questionnaire with good psychometric properties (Cepeda-Benito, Gleaves,
Willams, & Erath, 2000). The FCQ-S items are scaled on a five point Likret scale and measures
five factors.
External eating will be assessed using the external eating scale in the Dutch Eating Behavior
Questionnaire (DEBQ), a self-report questionnaire with good psychometric properties (van
Strien, Frijters, Bergers, & Defares, 1986). The DEBQ measure restraint, emotional and
external eating in different scales. The external eating scale contains ten statements scored
on a five point Likret scale .
Disturbed eating will be assessed using the widely used Eating Attitude Test 26 (EAT-26)
(Garner, Olmstead, Bohr, & Garfinkel, 1982). The EAT-26 is an 26-item measure of self
reported symptoms and characteristics of EDs using a six point Likret scale (an example
statement is "In the past 6 month have you: Exercised more than 60 minutes a day to lose or
control your weight").
SNS food preoccupation will be measured by asking participant about specific food related
SNSs activities and the frequency they engage in it. The activities include: frequency of
posting food pictures on either Facebook or Instagram, frequency of encountering food
pictures on either Facebook or Instagram, frequency of sending food pictures on WhatsApp,
frequency of receiving food pictures on WhatsApp, frequency of following chefs, restaurants
or brands on Instagram, frequency of posting pictures of food one prepared, frequency of
posting pictures of food one is about to eat, frequency of taking pictures of ordered dishes
in a restaurant, and lastly number of food-related groups one is a member of. The response on
the first eighth questions was on a 5-point scale, ranging from 'never' to 'very often' and
the response on the last question was on a 5-point scale, ranging from 0 to 7 and more. A
total mean score of nine SNSs activities will be computed.
Design The independent variables will be the manipulated video (food versus non-food
content), SNS use, SNS food preoccupation and disordered eating. External eating, food
craving and food (type and amount) ordered will be the dependent variables.
Procedure After receiving an explanation about the study and providing informed consent
online, participants will complete questionnaires assessing demographic variables, SNS food
preoccupation and disturbed eating online via Qualtrics link. Participants will then be
randomly assigned to view a video clip showing pictures of appetizing foods (experimental
group) or neutral pictures of tourist destinations (control group). After viewing the video,
participants will respond to online questionnaire measuring external eating and food
cravings, and will also be asked to order food they would like to eat immediately from a
hypothetical. The study will be approved by the IRB.
Statistical analyses Descriptive statistics will describe the characteristics of
participants. Basic descriptive statistics will also be computed for the key variables of SNS
use and eating patterns. The main analysis will examine the effect of the clip manipulation
on external eating, food cravings and type and amount of food ordered, using MANCOVA, with
disordered eating will be examined as a covariate. All statistical analyses will be performed
using SPSS 23 (IBM SPSS Statistics, New York, USA).
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