New findings challenge the wisdom of budgeting calories for the day, which is what weight-control programs like Weight Watchers and diet apps like MyFitnessPal use.
The researchers wanted to know if setting calorie budgets by meal and adding them up to get a daily calorie budget would make any difference to dieters. To find out, they asked people to set calorie budgets either by day or by meal (breakfast, lunch, dinner, snacks).
“We found that consumers set lower daily calorie budgets if they set them by meal versus by day,” says study coauthor Aradhna Krishna, professor of marketing at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business.
The researchers found that the daily calorie budget was lower by at least 100 calories when study participants set the daily budget by meal rather than by day. This may not sound like much on the surface, but it translates to a pound of extra weight loss every five weeks, Krishna says.
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Dieters are motivated to cut calories and, therefore, treat each instance of calorie decision-making as an opportunity to cut them, says coauthor Miaolei Jia of the University of Warwick. Setting calories at each meal provides more calorie-cutting opportunities compared to calorie setting by day.
“We were able to show that in the budget-by-day approach, people thought about cutting calories for meals such as snacks and dinner where they were most likely to overconsume, but did not think about cutting calories for other meals,” says coauthor Xiuping Li of the National University of Singapore. “In the budget-by-meal approach, they cut calories in all meals and this drove down the calorie budget in the by-meal approach.”
The researchers also demonstrate that the lower daily calorie budgets set in the by-meal approach also translate into lower calories being consumed.
“We asked people to set budgets for the next day and then to take pictures of all the food and drink they consumed the next day,” Krishna says. “We found that people who had set the daily calorie budget by meal ended up eating fewer calories the next day compared to people who had set the calorie budget by day.”
The results are relevant for controlling how much one eats, and also how much one smokes or drinks—basically for any context where people have a motive to reduce their consumption. They show that smokers lower daily budgets for nicotine when they set them by occasion rather than by day.
The paper appears in the Journal of Consumer Research.
Source: University of Michigan
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