Psychology says switching the hand you use for movie popcorn can break autopilot eating; a cinema experiment found that using the non-dominant hand disrupted habitual consumption

A psychology study suggests switching hands while eating popcorn reduces mindless eating. This disruption interrupts automatic behaviors linked to familiar surroundings and routines. Habits persist when context remains the same, and cues are not altered. Small changes can make behaviors less automatic, increasing awareness of consumption. This technique may apply to other repetitive snacking behaviors beyond movie theaters.

Psychology says switching the hand you use for movie popcorn can break autopilot eating; a cinema experiment found that using the non-dominant hand disrupted habitual consumption
A psychology study suggests switching hands while eating popcorn reduces mindless eating. This disruption interrupts automatic behaviors linked to familiar surroundings and routines. Habits persist when context remains the same, and cues are not altered. Small changes can make behaviors less automatic, increasing awareness of consumption. This technique may apply to other repetitive snacking behaviors beyond movie theaters.