Wednesday, 24 August 2016

If you want to eat less, think you're a foodie

                People who believe themselves to be “food addicts” eat less, claims a new study which found that the perception of being a foodie make them concerned about their behavior. Obesity is often attributed to an addiction to food and many people believe themselves to be “food addicts”. However, until now no studies have looked at whether believing oneself to be a food addict influences how much we eat. Researchers examined the impact of changing participants’ personal food addiction beliefs on eating behavior. Participants who were told they scored highly in food addiction went on to consume fewer calories than those who were told they had a low or average score. The same participants reported greater concern about their eating behavior.

Virtual Reality can help treat paranoia

                A study found that Virtual Reality (VR) can be effective in treating people suffering from severe paranoia. Using top of the range VR headsets, which can track users’ movements and immerse them in a simulated world, the team virtually placed paranoia sufferers in environments they found stressful, like crowded trains or cramped lifts. By experiencing these places in a controlled setting, the patients were able to practice how to deal with them. By the end of the groundbreaking tests, many of the patients reported a marked decrease in their paranoia. In the tests, the participants donned a VR headset and entered a virtual tube train, which became more and more crowded in each session. There is a lot of work to be done in testing the approach in treating delusions but this study shows a new way forward.