Researcher Angela Incollingo Rodriguez was home with a newborn in 2019 when, during a quiet moment, she made herself a peanut butter and jelly sandwich for lunch, took out her smartphone, and started scrolling.
She remembers all of that. What she doesn’t remember is eating the sandwich.
“I’d eaten the whole sandwich while I was looking at my phone and didn’t even enjoy it,” says Incollingo Rodriguez, assistant professor in the Department of Social Science and Policy Studies. “Researchers have long known that people eat more while watching television, but there is conflicting research on whether people eat more while using a smartphone. I wondered whether this distraction that I experienced while using my phone might signal a broader trend in eating behavior.”
The question prompted the first study that Incollingo Rodriguez, a health psychologist and behavioral scientist, launched in her Stigma, Eating, and Endocrinology Dynamics (SEED) Lab after joining the WPI faculty. Beginning in fall 2019, she and her student researchers enrolled 118 WPI student volunteers in an experiment that was disguised as taste-testing research and divided them into groups. All participants snacked while using technology and while not using technology. When using technology, some participants used smartphones, and others watched television.
The paper, recently published in the journal Physiology & Behavior by Incollingo Rodriguez and co-authors Mira S. Kirschner ’24, MS ’25 and Lorena S. Nunes ’24, MS ’25, revealed some expected results: Participants who snacked while watching television ate more than participants who ate without TV.
Other results, however, were surprising: Participants who snacked while using their phones did not eat more than participants who snacked without phones.
“This was a very interesting finding,” Incollingo Rodriguez says. “We know that smartphones are distracting, and we also know that when people are distracted, they eat more and their memory of eating fades, making them likely to eat more at later meals. It’s possible, though, that as people use their hands with a smartphone, their pace of eating slows. This research raises many questions about smartphones, memory, and eating.”
