Author:
Bevelander Kirsten E.,Anschütz Doeschka J.,Engels Rutger C. M. E.
Abstract
The present experimental study was the first to investigate the impact of a remote (non-existent) peer on children's food choice of familiarv. unfamiliar low- and high-energy-dense food products. In a computer task, children (n316; 50·3 % boys; mean age 7·13 (sd0·75) years) were asked to choose between pictures of familiar and unfamiliar foods in four different choice blocks using the following pairs: (1) familiarv. unfamiliar low-energy-dense foods (fruits and vegetables), (2) familiarv. unfamiliar high-energy-dense foods (high sugar, salt and/or fat content), (3) familiar low-energy-densev. unfamiliar high-energy-dense foods and (4) unfamiliar low-energy-densev. familiar high-energy-dense foods. Participants who were not in the control group were exposed to the food choices (either always the familiar or always the unfamiliar food product) of a same-sex and same-age fictitious peer who was supposedly completing the same task at another school. The present study provided insights into children's choices between (un)familiar low- and high-energy-dense foods in an everyday situation. The findings revealed that the use of fictitious peers increased children's willingness to try unfamiliar foods, although children tended to choose high-energy-dense foods over low-energy-dense foods. Intervention programmes that use peer influence to focus on improving children's choice of healthy foods should take into account children's strong aversion to unfamiliar low-energy-dense foods as well as their general preference for familiar and unfamiliar high-energy-dense foods.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Cited by
22 articles.
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