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{{Redirect|Eat|other uses of "eat", or "EAT" as an abbreviation or acronym|EAT}}
{{redirect|Feeding}}
[[Image:20051129-MelbMeetup-Dining.JPG|thumb|right|250px|Eating is often a social occasion.]]
[[Image:Lunch Iraq.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Marines having lunch with Iraqi soldiers during Operation Iraqi Freedom.]]
[[Image:High school students eating Ramen.JPG|thumb|right|250px|High school students eating Ramen]]
'''Eating''' is [[ingestion|ingesting]] [[food]] to provide for an animal's [[nutrition]]al needs, particularly for [[food energy|energy]] and growth. All animals must eat [[organism]]s in order to survive: [[carnivore]]s eat other animals, [[herbivore]]s eat plants, and [[omnivore]]s consume a mixture of both. Eating is an [[Activities of daily living|activity of daily living]].

==Eating practices==
Many homes have a kitchen room or outside (in the tropics) kitchen area devoted to preparation of meals and food, and may have a [[dining room]], [[dining hall]], or another designated area for eating. Some trains have a [[dining car]]. Dishware, silverware, [[drinkware]], and [[cookware]] come in a wide array of forms and sizes. Most societies also have [[restaurant]]s, [[food court]]s, and/or [[street food|food vendors]], so that people may eat when away from home, when lacking time to prepare food, or as a social occasion ([[dining club]]).<ref>John Raulston Saul (1995), "The Doubter's Companion", 155</ref> At their highest level of sophistication, these places become "theatrical spectacles of global [[cosmopolitanism]] and [[myth]]."<ref> David Grazian (2008), "On the Make: The Hustle of Urban Nightlife", 32</ref> Occasionally, such as at [[picnic]]s, [[potluck]]s, and [[food festival]]s, eating is in fact the primary purpose of the social gathering. However, this is not always true, such as in [[religious gathering]]s.

People commonly have two or three meals a day at regular times. Snacks of smaller amounts may be consumed between meals. Some propose not snacking, yet advocate three meals a day (of 600 kcal per meal) with four to six hours between.<ref>[http://www.bcminfo.be Eating recommendations by BCM]</ref> Having three well-balanced meals (thus 1/2 of the plate with vegetables<ref>[http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/what-should-you-eat/vegetables-and-fruits/ Half of plate to be filled with vegetables, according to Harvard School of Public Health]</ref>, 1/4 protein food as meat, ... and 1/4 carbohydrates as pasta, rice, ...) will then account to some 1800–2000 kcal; which is the average requirement for a regular person.<ref>[http://www.iloveindia.com/nutrition/food-facts/calorie-requirement-of-body.html Calorie requirements for regular person estimated at 2000 kcal]</ref>

The issue of [[healthy eating]] has long been an important concern to individuals and cultures. Among other practices, [[fasting]], [[dieting]], and [[vegetarianism]] are all techniques employed by individuals and encouraged by societies to increase longevity and health.{{Fact|date=January 2009}} Some religions promote vegetarianism, considering it wrong to consume animals. Leading nutritionists believe that instead of indulging oneself in three large meals each day, it is much healthier and easier on the metabolism to eat five smaller meals each day (e.g. better digestion, easier on the lower intestine to deposit wastes; whereas larger meals are tougher on the digestive tract and may call for the use of [[laxatives]]){{Fact|date=January 2008}}. However, psychiatrists with Yale Medical School have found that people who suffer from Binge Eating Disorder (BED) and consume three meals per day weigh less than those who have more frequent meals. Eating can also be a way of making money (see [[competitive eating]]).

===Emotional eating===
[[File:Eating.jpg|thumb|A man eating.]]
[[Emotional eating]] is “the tendency to eat in response to negative emotions”.<ref>Eldredge, K. L., & Agras, W. S. (1994). Weight and Shape Overconcern and Emotional Eating in Binge Eating Disorder. ''International Journal of Eating Disorders, 19'' (1), 73-82.</ref> Empirical studies have indicated that anxiety leads to decreased food consumption in people with normal weight and increased food consumption in the obese.<ref>McKenna, R. J. (1972). Some Effects of Anxiety Level and Food Cues on the Eating Behavior of Obese and Normal Subjects: A Comparison of Schachterian and Psychosomatic Conceptions. ''Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 22'' (3), 311-319.</ref>

Many laboratory studies showed that overweight individuals are more emotionally reactive and are more likely to overeat when distressed than people of normal weight. Furthermore, it was consistently found that obese individuals experience negative emotions more frequently and more intensively than do normal weight persons.<ref name="Lowe">Lowe, M. R., & Fisher, E. B. Jr. (1983). Emotional Reactivity, Emotional Eating, and Obesity: A Naturalistic Study. ''Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 6'' (2), 135-149.</ref>

The naturalistic study of Lowe and Fisher compared the emotional reactivity and emotional eating of normal and overweight female college students. The study confirmed the tendency of obese individuals to overeat, but these findings applied only to snacks, not to meals. That means that obese individuals did not tend to eat more while having meals – rather, the amount of snacks they ate between meals was greater. One possible explanation that Lowe and Fisher suggest is that obese individuals often eat their meals with others and do not eat more than average due to the reduction of distress because of the presence of other people. Another possible explanation would be that obese individuals do not eat more than the others while having meals due to social desirability. Conversely, snacks are usually eaten alone.<ref name="Lowe"/>

===Satiety and human metabolism===
{{See|Hunger#Biological mechanisms}}
The control of food intake is a physiologically complex, motivated behavioral system. Hormones such as [[cholecystokinin]], [[bombesin]], [[neurotensin]], [[anorectic|anorectin]], [[calcitonin]], [[enterostatin]], [[leptin]] and [[corticotropin-releasing hormone]] have all been shown to suppress food intake.<ref>Geiselman, P.J. (1996). Control of food intake. A physiologically complex, motivated behavioral system. Endocrinol Metab Clin North Am. 1996 Dec;25(4):815-29.</ref><ref>http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/dispomim.cgi?id=164160&rn=1</ref>

==Disorders==
{{main|Eating disorder}}

Physiologically, eating is generally triggered by [[hunger]], but there are numerous physical and psychological conditions that can affect [[appetite]] and disrupt normal eating patterns. These include [[clinical depression|depression]], food [[allergy|allergies]], ingestion of certain chemicals, [[bulimia]], [[anorexia nervosa]], [[pituitary gland]] misfunction and other [[endocrine]] problems, and numerous other [[illness]]es and [[eating disorder]]s.

A chronic lack of [[nutrition|nutritious]] food can cause various illnesses, and will eventually lead to [[starvation]]. When this happens in a locality on a massive scale it is considered a [[famine]].

If eating and [[drinking]] is not possible, as is often the case when recovering from [[surgery]], alternatives are [[Route of administration#enteral|enteral]] nutrition and [[parenteral nutrition]].

==See also==
{{Wiktionary}}
* [[Aphagia]]
* [[Competitive eating]]
* [[Crop]]
* [[Dietary supplement]]
* [[Dieting]]
* [[Dining in]], formal military ceremony
* [[Energy crop]]

==References==
{{reflist}}

[[Category:Food and drink]]

[[kn:ತಿನ್ನುವಿಕೆ]]
[[es:Alimentación]]
[[fr:Alimentation]]
[[ko:먹기]]
[[id:Makan]]
[[it:Alimentazione (nutrizione)]]
[[he:אכילה]]
[[nl:Eten]]
[[pt:Alimentação]]
[[simple:Edible]]
[[fi:Syöminen]]
[[sv:Ätande]]
[[tl:Pagkain (aktibidad)]]
[[yi:עסן]]
[[vi:Ăn]]
[[zh-yue:食嘢]]
[[zh:進食]]

Revision as of 13:43, 28 April 2010

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