Inverse - 🧠 Let’s talk about hanger

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Inverse Daily
 
Sarah Sloat Sunday Scaries
 
 
Hello! My name is Sarah Sloat and welcome to Sunday Scaries #171. Thanks for reading this chill newsletter for not-chill people.

This week we’re going to be discussing a feeling I know all too well: hanger.
 
 
 
This week’s chill icon
 
 
 
 
This week’s chill icon? Everybody participating in this meme. Skewering a fear-mongering myth while cracking jokes? Very chill.

Have you encountered a chill icon (or icons) IRL or during your internet browsing? If so, I want to hear from you. Send an email over to sundayscaries@inverse.com and you might see them in next week’s newsletter.
 
 
 
Let’s talk about hanger
 
English speakers have a particular fascination with words that don’t exist in the language but which sum up a universal feeling or experience. For example, in Russian, the word razbliuto roughly translates to the nostalgia you feel for someone you are no longer in love with. And in French, seigneur-terraces is a term for people who spend a lot of time but not a lot of money in cafes. 

But English does have one word that perfectly encapsulates an emotion we can all identify with: Hangry. The term likely emerged in the ‘90s and was later popularized as a meme. It is a portmanteau of hungry and angry — and it is scientifically proven to be real. 

Viren Swami, a professor of social psychology at Anglia Ruskin University, is interested in hanger because he’s curious about the effects of hunger on psychology, such as body size perception. There’s also an element of scientific mystery: There are a few lab-based studies on the subject, but these have mainly focused on the effect of glucose levels on self-control and self-regulation and less on emotional states.

Swami is also interested in the subject because he gets hangry (or at least, that’s what his wife tells him). 

His study on hanger is thought to be the first to probe how hunger influences emotions outside of a lab setting. His team’s analysis suggests a significant link between being hungry and feelings of anger and irritability. Hangry people were also less likely to describe their emotional state as pleasant. The findings are in the journal PLoS One

Hunger, the study team finds, may not automatically lead to negative emotions — but the jump from hungry to hangry can be an unconscious process. “It may not take much for hungry individuals to experience anger and irritability,” the researchers write. 

But we do have some control over whether or not hanger takes hold. Separate research suggests labeling an emotion can help regulate that emotion. This ability can helpful in the case of hanger, explains Swami.

“Giving your anger a label — ‘I am hangry’ — could allow you to make sense of what you’re experiencing, but could also help you understand what you should do next — ‘I am hangry, so I should eat something,’” Swami says.
 
 
 
The science of hanger
 
Swami’s findings are based on an analysis of 64 study participants who were surveyed about their levels of hunger and well-being for 21 days. Five times a day they were prompted to report several stats, including how they were feeling, how hungry they were, and where they were. In addition, the study participants were also asked to report demographic factors like age, sex, and personality traits. 

The study team used this information to show that negative emotions can be predicted by both day-to-day fluctuations in hunger as well as mean levels of hunger over the previous three weeks. The results suggest this is true regardless of demographic factors. 

Further, hunger was associated with 38 percent in the variance in pleasure, 34 percent in the variance in anger, and 37 percent in the variance in irritability recorded by the participants. 

While this study didn’t examine why hunger can lead to these emotions, earlier research suggests it may be because low blood glucose levels can decrease our ability to self-regulate and self-control emotions. In turn, this can result in increased impulsivity, anger, and aggression. 

The link may also explain why people who are hungry are more likely to view ambiguous situations as negative. Research also suggests people who are more emotionally aware are less likely to become hangry.

This brings us back to Swami’s advice: One of the best things you can do when you’re hangry is realize that you’re hangry. You may not actually be all that irritated with the people around you. Instead, you might need a snack
 
 
 
Now look at this oddly satisfying thing
 
 
 
 
This very satisfying shot was captured by Sunday Scaries reader Amy. It shows a pineapple growing!

Have you seen something strangely satisfying online or IRL? Then send your best examples to sundayscaries@inverse.com for consideration for next week.
 
 
 
What I’m reading this week
 
Distract yourself from the scaries with these reads:

An antidote to heartbreak? Science reveals how to hack loneliness. There are science-backed strategies to counter the negative downstream effects of rejection.

LSD-like drug may treat depression without the “trip” effect. This treatment acts like an antidepressant without hallucinations. 

See the debris streaming from spacecraft-damaged asteroid — 7 million miles from Earth. These plumes are stunning.

And if it’s midnight and you’re still feeling the scaries…

Watch superstar Lizzo play this historic crystal flute.

Thank you for reading Sunday Scaries! If you’ve been with us since the first article, thank you for sticking around. If you’re new around here — welcome! I hope you find it helpful.
 
 
 
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