Abstract
Deviant eating behavior such as skipping meals and consuming unhealthy meals has a significant association with mental well-being in college students. However, there is more to what an individual eats. While eating patterns form a critical component of their mental well-being, insights and assessments related to the interplay of eating patterns and mental well-being remain under-explored in theory and practice. To bridge this gap, we use an existing real-time eating detection system that captures context during meals to examine how college students' eating context associates with their mental well-being, particularly their affect, anxiety, depression, and stress. Our findings suggest that students' irregularity or skipping meals negatively correlates with their mental well-being, whereas eating with family and friends positively correlates with improved mental well-being. We discuss the implications of our study in designing dietary intervention technologies and guiding student-centric well-being technologies.
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Morshed, M. B., Kulkarni, S. S., Saha, K., Li, R., Roper, L. G., Nachman, L., … Abowd, G. (2022). Food, Mood, Context: Examining College Students’ Eating Context and Mental Well-being. ACM Transactions on Computing for Healthcare, 3(4). https://doi.org/10.1145/3533390
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