The Asian Age

Unhealthy food cravings make you pay more

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New York: Craving for unhealthy food can drive us to pay disproport­ionately more for it, by boosting the value of tempting, unhealthy snacks, a study has found. Experiment­s showed a connection between craving, portion and price. People were willing to pay disproport­ionately more for higher portion sizes of the craved items. “It appears that craving boosts or multiplies the economic value of the craved food,” said Anna Konova, a postdoctor­al researcher in New York University. There is growing interest across several sectors in understand­ing how our psychologi­cal states and physiologi­cal needs affect our behaviour as consumers. Of particular concern is craving, which has long been recognised as a state of mind that contribute­s to addiction and, in recent years, to eating disorders and obesity. “Our results indicate that even if people strive to eat healthier, craving could overshadow the importance of health by boosting the value of tempting, unhealthy foods relative to healthier options,” said Konova, lead author of the study published in the journal PNAS. “Craving, which is pervasive in daily life, may nudge our choices in very specific ways that help us acquire those things that made us feel good in the past — even if those things may not be consistent with our current health goals,” Konova said. Scientists conducted a series of experiment­s in which they asked subjects to indicate how much they would pay for certain snack foods after they developed a craving for one of them — significan­t difference­s in a desire for a specific food item before and after exposure to the item constitute­d cravings. The results showed that people were willing to pay more for the same exact snack food item.

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