Listening to slow and steady music while eating slows down food intake, a new study suggests. The presence of a downbeat tempo influences how much people scoff their food, because humans have a tendency to subconsciously eat to the beat of the music. When the music played is slow and legato, this amplifies the effect [...]

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Music could be the secret to eating less

Playing slow tunes during meals discourages people from wolfing down their food, study shows
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Listening to slow and steady music while eating slows down food intake, a new study suggests.

The presence of a downbeat tempo influences how much people scoff their food, because humans have a tendency to subconsciously eat to the beat of the music.

When the music played is slow and legato, this amplifies the effect and further reduces food consumption.

Scientists say the findings could be used by schools or restaurants as a way to control the amount people consume.

Food scientists from Aarhus University in Denmark recruited more than 200 volunteers for the research, and secretly recorded them eating chocolate.

They timed how long it took for participants to get through five pieces of chocolate.

When eating in silence the average amount of time it took was 24 seconds

When upbeat music of 180 beats per minute was played, the people took ten seconds longer to eat all the snacks.

However, when played slow music, at just 45 bpm, the eating speed went down again, this time taking a further four seconds to devour all the chocolate.

Tempo of music has long been linked to levels of excitement – a quicker beat raises the heart rate while a slower rhythm induces relaxation.

Apart from varying speeds of the same music, there were also versions in ‘legato’, where the notes blend into each other, and ‘staccato’, when the notes are played separately.

The legato versions saw listeners take more time chewing their chocolate than those listening to staccato versions.

The researchers reported: ‘The results from these experiments confirm that music could be employed as a contextual cue to modulate eating speed, contributing to healthier eating behaviours such as eating more slowly and consuming less food.’

They added: ‘A longer eating duration could be due to an entrainment effect where subjects (either consciously or not) align their own chewing rhythm to the beat of the music, thus resulting in chewing slower when listening to slower music and vice versa.

‘Considering the current belief that slower eating and longer meal duration results in less food being consumed, eating the same amount of food within a longer timeframe presents obvious health benefits.’

The research was published in the journal Appetite.

Courtesy © The Daily Mail

 

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