Saturday, 14 April 2012

Professors develop food magnifying glasses, no need to super size

Professors develop food magnifying glasses, no need to super size
Big eyes, small stomach. We've all been there at some point, when we load our plate up with more than our tummies can handle. Now, a team of Professors at Tokyo University has created special glasses that magnify the food on your plate, to create the illusion of larger portions, and trick your brain into creating a sensation of fullness. Now this might just sound like "magnifying glasses" but to give it credit, it's a little smarter than that. The diet-specs house a camera that only expands your nosh (up to fifty percent,) and not your hands. The proof of concept has been backed up by a small group test of 12 people. The subjects consumed 9.3 percent less cookies when magnified, and ate 15 percent more when the treats were set to appear smaller. Certainly these are the wackiest glasses we've seen in, oh, over a week.

Professors develop food magnifying glasses, no need to super size originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 13 Apr 2012 15:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Verge  |  sourceYomiuri Online (Japanese)  | Email this | Comments

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