Diners at a restaurant table: one hesitates to eat her arrived meal while companions encourage her, illustrating a study on overestimated social awkwardness.
Diners at a restaurant table: one hesitates to eat her arrived meal while companions encourage her, illustrating a study on overestimated social awkwardness.
Immagine generata dall'IA

Study finds diners overestimate how awkward it is to start eating before others are served

Immagine generata dall'IA
Verificato

Researchers report that people feel more uncomfortable starting to eat when their meal arrives first than they expect their dining companions would. The self–other gap persisted across multiple experiments and was only modestly reduced by perspective-taking prompts or by a companion explicitly encouraging them to begin.

A new study examined a familiar dining rule: waiting to eat until everyone at the table has been served. The research found that people anticipate feeling substantially more uncomfortable breaking the “wait until everyone is served” norm than they believe others would feel if roles were reversed.

The paper—titled “Wait or Eat? self-other differences in a commonly held food norm”—was co-authored by Anna Paley, Irene Scopelliti and Janina Steinmetz and published in the journal Appetite (Volume 212, August 2025; article 108021). In six experiments involving a total of 1,907 participants, the authors tested how people judge the norm for themselves versus for someone else.

Across the studies, participants were asked to imagine eating with a friend in situations where either they received their food first or they were the one still waiting. Those who imagined being served first reported a stronger sense that they “should” wait before starting to eat than participants expected a dining companion would feel in the same position.

The researchers also explored people’s emotional expectations. Participants anticipated they would feel better about waiting and worse about eating immediately than they believed others would feel, contributing to what the authors described as a consistent self–other gap.

Two interventions were tested to see whether the gap could be reduced. Prompting participants to take the other person’s perspective reduced the difference somewhat but did not eliminate it. And in one experiment, having a companion explicitly encourage the person who was served first to begin eating did not significantly change the self–other gap.

In comments accompanying the release, Steinmetz said the decision of when to start eating in a group is a common social dilemma, and that the discomfort people feel about starting early “barely changes even when another person explicitly asks us to go ahead.” Scopelliti attributed the mismatch in part to “psychological access,” arguing that people can feel their own discomfort or guilt directly but cannot fully access others’ internal experiences.

The findings suggest that in restaurants and other shared-service settings, serving everyone at the same time could reduce awkwardness for some diners. The authors also argued the dynamics may extend beyond meals to other situations in which members of a group receive service at noticeably different times.

Cosa dice la gente

Discussions on X about the study are limited and recent. Users paraphrase the findings on the self-other gap in discomfort when starting to eat before others. A detailed Japanese post analyzes experiment results with specific ratings and recommends simultaneous food serving. Skeptical opinions prioritize traditional table manners.

Articoli correlati

Illustration of college students eating high-calorie meals in social campus dining settings, per George Mason University study.
Immagine generata dall'IA

Study links campus social settings to higher calorie intake among college students

Riportato dall'IA Immagine generata dall'IA Verificato

Researchers at George Mason University have identified key social and environmental factors that shape how much college students eat. In a four-week study using a mobile app and daily surveys, students tended to consume more calories when eating with multiple companions or in formal dining settings, even as many reported that they believed they were eating less in those situations.

People often worry that cancelling social plans will upset others, but a new study shows those on the receiving end are more forgiving than expected. Researchers found a significant gap between how cancellers predict reactions and how recipients actually feel. The findings suggest less stress over cancellations could lead to more social engagements.

Riportato dall'IA

Ikea has released findings from its 2026 Cooking & Eating Report, based on responses from over 31,000 people in 31 countries. The survey highlights average dinner times, preferred eating locations, and food preferences worldwide. Key insights reveal variations by country and generation in cooking and dining habits.

A trend toward shorter restaurant menus, which began as a necessity during the COVID-19 pandemic, has persisted among chefs for reasons of efficiency and creativity. While this shift aids kitchen operations and allows for more focused dishes, it can limit options for diners with specific preferences or dietary needs. Experts suggest that the change reflects a broader evolution in the industry toward streamlined offerings.

Riportato dall'IA

A new study challenges the hype around intermittent fasting, finding that limiting eating to an eight-hour window does not improve metabolic health if calorie intake remains the same. Researchers from German institutions observed shifts in the body's internal clocks but no changes in insulin sensitivity or cardiovascular markers. The results suggest that calorie control, rather than meal timing alone, drives potential health gains.

A study reveals that the average person keeps nine types of secrets, which often intrude on their thoughts and cause emotional distress. Researchers from the University of Melbourne explored how these secrets affect well-being and suggest strategies for coping when sharing is not possible. The findings highlight the psychological toll of secret-keeping, particularly for those in sensitive roles like intelligence operatives.

Riportato dall'IA

A new review of studies suggests that intermittent fasting offers no significant advantage over traditional dieting or no intervention for weight loss among overweight or obese adults. Researchers analyzed data from 22 trials involving nearly 2,000 participants. While the approach remains popular, experts highlight limitations in the evidence.

 

 

 

Questo sito web utilizza i cookie

Utilizziamo i cookie per l'analisi per migliorare il nostro sito. Leggi la nostra politica sulla privacy per ulteriori informazioni.
Rifiuta