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Anticipatory Savoring and Consumption: Just Thinking about That First Bite of Chocolate Fills You Up Faster

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Citation

Black I & Areni CS (2016) Anticipatory Savoring and Consumption: Just Thinking about That First Bite of Chocolate Fills You Up Faster. Psychology and Marketing, 33 (7), p. 516–524. https://doi.org/10.1002/mar.20894

Abstract
Two laboratory studies examine how consumers adjust their eating to the size of the portion they expect to receive. Participants who knew in advance that they would receive six pieces of chocolate waited less time before eating each piece and ate more pieces than participants who expected to receive only two pieces when they started, even though both groups were ultimately offered six pieces. In the second study, natural variance in how long participants waited before tasting the chocolates was negatively related to how many additional pieces they thought they could eat after finishing the last piece. These results suggest that increasing the interval prior to taking the first bite of a piece of chocolate reduced overall consumption. When consumers focus their attention on eating, the interval before taking the first bite captures anticipatory savoring - psychologically looking forward to the actual consumption experience.

Journal
Psychology and Marketing: Volume 33, Issue 7

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/07/2016
Publication date online09/06/2016
Date accepted by journal09/06/2016
URL
PublisherWiley-Liss Inc.
ISSN0742-6046
eISSN1520-6793

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