A meta-analysis study suggests that we tend to eat more when we're in a group, a phenomenon researchers call "social facilitation."
Who's never felt like they've eaten enough for days to come after a big family meal? The tendency to eat more than usual when we're in a group is not a myth and may even have a scientific explanation, according to a recent study published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Prior research has shown that those who eat in the company of others may consume up to 48% more than those who prefer to eat alone.
In an attempt to explain this phenomenon, researchers from the University of Birmingham, the University of Bristol, UK , and the University of New South Wales in Australia analyzed 42 journal reviews on the subject.
Two among those showed that the effects of social context on eating could be partly liked to meal length and social attitudes about the "appropriate" amounts to eat.