Keep Fruit Close and Vegetables Closer

2015-04-28 04:57
中学科技 2015年2期

College (A) s wishing to eat healthier may want to invest in a clear fruit bowl, says a recent (1) a published in the Environment and Behavior. The new study found that when fruits and vegetables are within arm's reach, students are more likely to eat them. Furthermore, making fruit and (2) v more visible increases the intake of fruit, but the same does not hold true for vegetables.

Researchers tested a total of 96 college students by placing apple slices and (B) c cuts in either clear or opaque bowls at a table close to the participants or at a table two meters away. Participants watched as the food was taken out of its packaging and were told that they were welcome to eat it.

After leaving the students alone with the food for ten (3) m , the researchers found that when apples and carrots were left close to the participants, those healthy foods were more likely to be (C) e . Interestingly, making the food more visible to participants by placing them in clear bowls increased the intake of the apples but not the carrots. The researchers explained that this might be due to the fact that fruit is sweeter and may induce more motivation to eat than bitter-tasting vegetables.

"Apples, but not carrots, have sugar, which is known to stimulate brain reward regions that induce a 'wanting' for foods that contain sugar," the authors (4) w . "Hence, apple slices may be more visually appealing than carrots." The researchers also offered (D) s for the structure of dining and cafe settings on college (5) c .

"Many dining facilities on college campuses are structured in a buffet," the researchers wrote. "Placing foods in (E) l that are more proximate (closest to seating area or entrance) and visible (in open containers at the front or easiest to reach locations in the buffet) could increase intake of these foods among college students."

(A, B, C, D, E FOR CROSS, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 FOR DOWN. The first letters of the absents were given)