Children Clinical Trial
Official title:
Children's Familiarity With Snack Foods Changes Expectations About Fullness
The purpose of this study was to measure and quantify children's beliefs about the satiating properties (i.e. expected satiation)of snack foods. The investigators predicted that children who were especially familiar with snack foods would expect them to deliver greater satiation.
Palatability is regarded as a major determinant of children's energy intake. However, few
studies have considered other "non-hedonic" beliefs about foods. In adults there is emerging
evidence that expectations about the satiating properties of foods are an important
determinant of meal size, and that these beliefs are learned over time.
In the current study, we measured and quantified children's 'expected satiation' across
energy-dense snack foods using a psychophysical technique known as method of adjustment.
Participants changed a comparison-food portion (pasta and tomato sauce) to match the
satiation that they expected from a snack food. We predicted that children who were
especially familiar with snack foods would expect them to generate greater satiation, and
that children who were unfamiliar would match expected satiation based on the physical
characteristics (perceived volume) of the foods.
In our study, seventy 11- to 12-year-old children completed computerised measures of
expected satiation, perceived volume, familiarity, and liking across six snack foods. Our
analyses focused on the associations between these measures. This approach enabled us to
establish differences in healthy behaviours that are evident across individuals.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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