2. Introduction to Eating Behaviour
• Make a list of 3 of your favourite foods, 3 of your least favourite foods 1
type of food that you have never tried.
• Compare your lists with those in your group.
• Discuss
• Are there any types of food that more than one of you put in the same category?
• Are the foods in one category more healthier than the other?
• When did you first try each of these foods?
• What made you decide you didn’t like them?
• Are there particular times where you eat your favourite foods more often?
• Are any of these types of food advertised on TV?
• Do your parents/family have similar likes and dislikes to food to you?
3. How can you tell if your eating behaviour is
normal?
• People’s attitudes to food and eating vary dramatically.
• Can you think of one person you know who you think has an
‘unhealthy’ relationship with food?
• What makes someone’s behaviour ‘unhealthy’?
• Is it about the food they eat?
• Or when they eat?
• Or how much they eat?
Who is healthier in the picture?
4. List as many factors as you can that affect our food choice
and eating behaviour:
6. FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE ATITUDES TO
FOOD AND EATING BEHAVIOUR
• Mood
• Social Learning
• Health concerns
We are going to focus on these two:
Exam link
Discuss the role of one or more factors that
influence attitudes to food. (4 marks + 8
marks)
7. In your groups you have been given a piece of
research
• You must act out what your piece of research
found out about eating habits.
• You can choose whether to do this as a role
play or a series of freeze frames.
• Your audience must be able to answer the
following question from your performance:
‘What did the study find out about how
attitudes to food and eating behaviour can be
influenced’. So make sure your performance is
clear
• Decide in your groups who will be the narrator,
participants, researcher etc.
8.
9. Comfort Eating
•Garge et al (2007)
• Observed food choices in 38 participants watching a
funny (sweet home Alabama) or sad movie (love
story)
• Participants were offered buttered popcorn or
grapes
• Participants watching the sad film consumed 36%
more popcorn than those watching funny film, who
ate more grapes
• When given the nutritional information before the
consumption of the unhealthy food, snacking
dropped dramatically
10. Davis et al 1988
• Studied patients with bulimia nervosa
• Patients recorded their food intake and mood every hour for a
number of days
• The reports showed that negative mood states before a binge
episode were higher than before a normal meal.
• Suggests that negative moods are an influence on eating
behaviour amongst the clinical population
11. Wegner et al (2002)
• Students recorded their
eating patterns and
mood states over 2
weeks.
• Finding 1:
Binge days were lower
in mood state than non
binge days.
• Finding 2:
What does the graph
show?
Hours relative to Binge
13. This could be because:
• Children observe the attitudes
and eating behaviour of their
parents. (Social learning)
And
• Parents control the food brought
and served at home.
• Brown and Ogden (2004)
•Found that there were correlations between parents and
their children in terms of snack food intake, eating
motivations and body dissatisfaction.
15. Media:
• How does the media affect our attitudes to
eating?
Negative Positive
16. Media:
MacIntyre et al (1998) found that
the media have a major impact
both on what people eat, and also
their attitudes to certain foods.
17. Task:
• Look at the pictures:
• For each picture state how the media influences people.
• What attitudes are people going to have from each of
these pictures.
• Find your own images – and create a collage to show how
the media has a part to play in food influences. Suggest
how they do this.
18. •Kotler et al (2012) Conducted two experiments to assess the role of media
characters in influencing children’s food choices.
•Experiment 1: Children’s opinion
Children were more likely to indicate a preference for one food over
another when one was associated with TV characters with whom they were
familiar. However, when children were asked to choose between a healthy
food with a favoured character and a sugary or salty snack with an
unfamiliar one, this effect did not happen so it seems the TV characters can
not over ride a preference for sweet/salty foods.
•Experiment 2: Children’s choice
Children were more willing to try more pieces of a healthy food if a
favoured character, in comparison with an unknown character, is promoting
that food.