Calorie Compensation Patterns Observed in App-Based Food Diaries

Amruta Pai, Ashutosh Sabharwal

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Self-regulation of food intake is necessary for maintaining a healthy body weight. One of the characteristics of self-regulation is calorie compensation. Calorie compensation refers to adjusting the current meal’s energy content based on the energy content of the previous meal(s). Preload test studies measure a single instance of compensation in a controlled setting. The measurement of calorie compensation in free-living conditions has largely remained unexplored. This paper proposes a methodology that leverages extensive app-based observational food diary data to measure an individual’s calorie compensation profile in free-living conditions. Instead of a single compensation index followed in preload–test studies, we present the compensation profile as a distribution of days a user exhibits under-compensation, overcompensation, non-compensation, and precise compensation. We applied our methodology to the public food diary data of 1622 MyFitnessPal users. We empirically established that four weeks of food diaries were sufficient to characterize a user’s compensation profile accurately. We observed that meal compensation was more likely than day compensation. Dinner compensation had a higher likelihood than lunch compensation. Precise compensation was the least likely. Users were more likely to overcompensate for missing calories than for additional calories. The consequences of poor compensatory behavior were reflected in their adherence to their daily calorie goal. Our methodology could be applied to food diaries to discover behavioral phenotypes of poor compensatory behavior toward forming an early behavioral marker for weight gain.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number4007
JournalNutrients
Volume15
Issue number18
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 16 2023

Keywords

  • calorie compensation
  • food diary
  • mhealth
  • MyFitnessPal
  • nutrition
  • preload
  • statistical analysis
  • Body Weight
  • Humans
  • Diet Records
  • Energy Intake
  • Mobile Applications
  • Health Status

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Food Science
  • Nutrition and Dietetics

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