Training people to be more emotionally aware may be a more powerful strategy to promote healthier eating than better labeling and improved nutritional knowledge, according to a recent study.

As obesity rates rise, health professionals and policy makers scramble to help consumers resist unhealthy eating choices, often focusing on better labeling and improved nutritional knowledge, according to researchers from the University of Kentucky, Ohio State and Florida International University.

"Consumers are often mindless," researchers said in the study. "We not only demonstrate that emotional ability is trainable and that food choices can be enhanced, but also that emotional ability training improves food choices beyond a nutrition knowledge training program."

For the study, participants were given general training in recognizing basic emotions in themselves and in others, after which they were exposed to a variety of food products and packaging and asked to notice what emotions they, and others, were experiencing. After the training, both the trained participants and people who had received no training were given the opportunity to choose a snack of either a healthy item or a chocolate bar. Those who had received the training were more likely to choose the healthy item.

Participants from both groups were weighed three months later. Researchers found that those who had received training in recognizing their emotions had, on average, lost weight whereas those who had received no training had actually put on weight.

Researchers concluded that by urging consumer educational programs to put less focus on reading nutritional labels and to instead encourage exercises that enhance emotional awareness.

"With a better understanding of how they feel and how to use emotions to make better decisions, people will not only eat better, they will also likely be happier and healthier because they relate better to others and are more concerned with their overall well-being," researchers said.

The findings are detailed in the Journal of Marketing Research.