The Last Bite Matters The Most
A new
research has disclosed that the last bite of food rather than the first
bite plays an important role in influencing the memory of people. It as
well help in determining when they have the great desire to eat more
be.
The
memory of people for food is frequently vivid, especially when they
experience food that are terrifyingly bad otherwise delightfully good.
The discoveries from this research spread light on how memories for food
are formed and how they guide the decisions about how soon people are
willing to eat a food again.
The
research established that this so-called "recency effect" might be
explained by memory interference induced by the repetitiveness of
eating, therefore, if a person takes a lot of bites of the same food in
succession, the memory for the last bites may interfere with the ability
to accurately remember the initial bites of that food.
Emily
Garbinsky of the Stanford University Graduate School of Business said
that the discoveries are crucial, as they suggest that large portions
may be somewhat harmful to companies because they extend the amount of
time that passes until repeat consumption occurs and it's also important
to the public, as eating too much of a favorite or healthy food may
increase the delay until one wants to eat it again. The research is
published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for
Psychological Science. (ANI)
(AW:SB)
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