The original: Rob Waugh
Translation: Celian
A series of new Japanese inventions may revolutionize diet, but westerners who want to go on a diet may 211.html "> find their shortcomings" hard to swallow.
Dieter must wear a pair of glasses, it can mislead the user to think that the food is 50% larger than the original, but the reassuring is that their hands are the same size.
Another small invention, tested in a laboratory called "metahttp://www.aliyun.com/zixun/aggregation/12583.html" >cookie+, uses a television screen to put food images into the eyes of the user, At the same time emits odors into the nose.
"Weight loss" glasses mislead the users by magnifying their food, making them feel fuller.
"Weight Loss" glasses enlarge the size of the food by 50%, leading people to eat less.
Metacookie Plus provides a variety of odors for consumers to "reinvent" the food. For example, the taste of a meal cookie is the same as that of a chocolate-flavored Medina.
"Weight loss" glasses deal with food images to make them look larger, but the size of the surrounding environment, such as hand and plate, is unchanged.
"Weight Loss" glasses enlarge the food by 50% and encourage dieters to eat less.
"Lose weight" glasses can enlarge food and encourage dieters to reduce their intake.
Google's high-simulation glasses: A similar technique, tested in Tokyo, can pass the scent of a particular food to the user's nose, while a television screen displays images of a beloved food.
Dieters have to wear glasses that can mislead the brain's sense of food to reduce appetite.
The first new type of glasses makes the food look bigger to reduce the appetite.
By processing the image, it can enlarge the food by 50% while keeping the size of the hand and the surrounding environment unchanged.
Its design idea is to induce users to believe that they eat more than they actually do.
Another way through psychological cues to lose weight metacookie+ glasses, can turn a cookie into your favorite food.
The smell of the virtual glasses will give the scent of a particular food to the user's nose, and the television screen will also display images of his beloved food.
The idea behind it is also to induce the brain to think that what it sees is true, and therefore alters the taste of food.
In another test, the "weight loss" glasses turned all the food into blue to reduce appetite.
The least technical method makes all food blue and no longer tempting. The Westerners who lose weight can quickly reach this approach.
Both "spectacle" prototypes were developed by the research team of Professor Longdao of the University of Tokyo, Japan.
The test showed that when participants wore the first "weight-loss" glasses that magnified the food by 50%, the cake intake was 9.3% less than that of those without glasses.
By contrast, when wearing glasses that reduce the number of cookies by 33%, the user's intake increased by 15%.
A third attempt to mislead the brain is the blue "slimming" glasses that reduce appetite, which has a much lower technological content.
This pilot-style "slimming" Sunglasses install dark blue lenses that reduce the allure of food.
The scientific rationale behind this is that blue can calm the central area of the brain that controls appetite, says Yumetai, a Japanese company.
Source:
The original: Rob Waugh
Translation: Celian
A series of new Japanese inventions may revolutionize diet, but westerners who want to diet may find their flaws "hard to swallow".
Dieter must wear a pair of glasses, it can mislead the user to think that the food is 50% larger than the original, but the reassuring is that their hands are the same size.
Another small invention, tested in a laboratory called "metacookie+", uses a television screen to put food images into the eyes of the user, while emitting odors into the nose.
"Weight loss" glasses mislead the users by magnifying their food, making them feel fuller.
"Weight Loss" glasses enlarge the size of the food by 50%, leading people to eat less.
Metacookie Plus provides a variety of odors for consumers to "reinvent" the food. For example, the taste of a meal cookie is the same as that of a chocolate-flavored Medina.
"Weight loss" glasses deal with food images to make them look larger, but the size of the surrounding environment, such as hand and plate, is unchanged.
"Weight Loss" glasses enlarge the food by 50% and encourage dieters to eat less.
"Lose weight" glasses can enlarge food and encourage dieters to reduce their intake.
Google's high-simulation glasses: A similar technique, tested in Tokyo, can pass the scent of a particular food to the user's nose, while a television screen displays images of a beloved food.
Dieters have to wear glasses that can mislead the brain's sense of food to reduce appetite.
The first new type of glasses makes the food look bigger to reduce the appetite.
By processing the image, it can enlarge the food by 50% while keeping the size of the hand and the surrounding environment unchanged.
Its design idea is to induce users to believe that they eat more than they actually do.
Another way through psychological cues to lose weight metacookie+ glasses, can turn a cookie into your favorite food.
The smell of the virtual glasses will give the scent of a particular food to the user's nose, and the television screen will also display images of his beloved food.
The idea behind it is also to induce the brain to think that what it sees is true, and therefore alters the taste of food.
In another test, the "weight loss" glasses turned all the food into blue to reduce appetite.
The least technical method makes all food blue and no longer tempting. The Westerners who lose weight can quickly reach this approach.
Both "spectacle" prototypes were developed by the research team of Professor Longdao of the University of Tokyo, Japan.
The test showed that when participants wore the first "weight-loss" glasses that magnified the food by 50%, the cake intake was 9.3% less than that of those without glasses.
By contrast, when wearing glasses that reduce the number of cookies by 33%, the user's intake increased by 15%.
A third attempt to mislead the brain is the blue "slimming" glasses that reduce appetite, which has a much lower technological content.
This pilot-style "slimming" Sunglasses install dark blue lenses that reduce the allure of food.
The scientific rationale behind this is that blue can calm the central area of the brain that controls appetite, says Yumetai, a Japanese company.