Literature
Eat slowly to feel fuller: Study
 London, July 26 
 Go slow while eating your food
 as people who eat slowly feel fuller and think they have eaten more 
than those who eat quickly, shows research.
Previous studies have
 found that slow eaters have lower Body Mass Index (BMIs) than those who
 gobble down their morsels. But the reasons were not well understood.
To
 investigate whether how quickly we eat influences how hungry we feel 
afterwards, researchers from the University of Bristol fed volunteers 
Sainsbury's tomato soup through a tube into their mouths, Daily Mail 
reported.
This set-up prevented the researchers from judging 
visually how much soup had been eaten. The participants then had 400 ml 
of soup put into their mouths at two rates. One was at a fast rate of 
11.8 ml for two seconds, followed by a four second pause.
The 
other, the slow rate, was 5.4 ml of soup for one second followed by a 
10-second pause. The volunteers were then asked how full they felt at 
the end of the meal and two hours after.
Those who took the soup 
more slowly said they felt fuller than the fast eaters both immediately 
after the test and two hours later.
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	