Digital Commensality: Eating and Drinking in the Company of Technology

被引:102
作者
Spence, Charles [1 ]
Mancini, Maurizio [2 ]
Huisman, Gijs [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oxford, Crossmodal Res Lab, Oxford, England
[2] Univ Coll Cork, Sch Comp Sci & IT, Cork, Ireland
[3] Amsterdam Univ Appl Sci, Digital Soc Sch, Amsterdam, Netherlands
关键词
virtual commensality; digital dining; technology; Mukbang; social dining; solo dining; digital distraction; SOCIAL FACILITATION; FOOD-INTAKE; MEAL INTAKE; NUTRITIONAL RISK; DIETARY-INTAKE; FAMILY MEAL; BEHAVIORS; TIME; TELEVISION; OBESITY;
D O I
10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02252
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Commensality is a key aspect of social dining. However, previous research has identified a number of pros and cons associated with the incorporation of digital technology into eating and drinking episodes. For instance, those who are distracted by digital technology may eat/drink more (that is, they may overconsume) as a result of their failure to attend to the food-related sensations that are thought to cue the termination of eating. Similarly, it has often been suggested that the use of mobile devices at mealtimes can disrupt the more commensal aspects of dining/drinking (at least among those who are physically present together). At the same time, however, looking to the future, it seems clear that digital technologies also hold the promise of delivering opportunities for enhanced multisensory experiential dining. For instance, they might be used to match the auditory, visual, or audiovisual entertainment to the eating/drinking episode (e.g., think only about watching a Bollywood movie while eating a home-delivery Indian meal, say). Indeed, given the growing societal problems associated with people dining by themselves, there are a number of routes by which digital technologies may increasingly help to connect the solo diner with physically co-located, remote, or even virtual dining partners. In this review of the literature, our focus is specifically on the role of technology in inhibiting/facilitating the more pleasurable social aspects of dining, what one might call "digital commensality." The focus is primarily on Westernized adults with reasonable access to, and familiarity with, digital technologies.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 190 条
[31]   Social modeling of eating: A review of when and why social influence affects food intake and choice [J].
Cruwys, Tegan ;
Beyelander, Kirsten E. ;
Hermans, Roel C. J. .
APPETITE, 2015, 86 :3-18
[32]   Modeling of food intake is moderated by salient psychological group membership [J].
Cruwys, Tegan ;
Platow, Michael J. ;
Angullia, Sarah A. ;
Chang, Jia Min ;
Diler, Sema E. ;
Kirchner, Joanne L. ;
Lentfer, Charlotte E. ;
Lim, Ying Jun ;
Quarisa, Aleisha ;
Tor, Veronica W. L. ;
Wadley, Amanda L. .
APPETITE, 2012, 58 (02) :754-757
[33]   Smartphone use while eating increases caloric ingestion [J].
da Mata Goncalves, Renata Fiche ;
Barreto, Danyela de Almeida ;
Monteiro, Pamela Ione ;
Zangeronimo, Marcio Gilberto ;
Castelo, Paula Midori ;
van der Bilt, Andries ;
Pereira, Luciano Jose .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 2019, 204 :93-99
[34]  
Danesi Giada., 2012, Menu, V1, P77, DOI DOI 10.26048/5289-3F91
[35]   Age-related changes in the social, psychological, and temporal influences on food intake in free-living, healthy, adult humans [J].
de Castro, JM .
JOURNALS OF GERONTOLOGY SERIES A-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND MEDICAL SCIENCES, 2002, 57 (06) :M368-M377
[36]   SOCIAL FACILITATION OF THE SPONTANEOUS MEAL SIZE OF HUMANS OCCURS REGARDLESS OF TIME, PLACE, ALCOHOL OR SNACKS [J].
DECASTRO, JM ;
BREWER, EM ;
ELMORE, DK ;
OROZCO, S .
APPETITE, 1990, 15 (02) :89-101
[37]   SOCIAL FACILITATION OF DURATION AND SIZE BUT NOT RATE OF THE SPONTANEOUS MEAL INTAKE OF HUMANS [J].
DECASTRO, JM .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 1990, 47 (06) :1129-1135
[38]   THE AMOUNT EATEN IN MEALS BY HUMANS IS A POWER FUNCTION OF THE NUMBER OF PEOPLE PRESENT [J].
DECASTRO, JM ;
BREWER, EM .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 1992, 51 (01) :121-125
[39]   FAMILY AND FRIENDS PRODUCE GREATER SOCIAL FACILITATION OF FOOD-INTAKE THAN OTHER COMPANIONS [J].
DECASTRO, JM .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 1994, 56 (03) :445-455
[40]  
Delistraty CC., 2014, The Atlantic