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Public Article
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    What I say isn’t always what I do: Investigating differences in children’s reported and actual snack food preferences

     
     
         
    ISSN: 1929 - 4247

    Publisher: author   

What I say isn’t always what I do: Investigating differences in children’s reported and actual snack food preferences
Indexed in Health Sciences
ARTICLE-FACTOR
 1.3
Article Basics Score: 3
Article Transparency Score: 3
Article Operation Score: 2
Article Articles Score: 2
Article Accessibility Score: 3
Article Problems
Under Evaluation
article Flaws Reduces Credit

SUBMIT PAPER ASK QUESTION
International Category Code (ICC):
ICC-0702
Publisher: Lifescience Global Inc.
Authors: Sandra C Jones, Lisa Kervin, Samantha Reis, Parri Gregory
International Journal Address (IAA):
IAA.ZONE/1929101544247
eISSN : 1929 - 4247 VALID ISSN Validator
Abstract The current study sought to explore discrepancies between children’s stated snack food motivations and actual food choices, using the Implicit Association Test (IAT) as a measure of implicit attitudes towards ‘healthy’ and ‘unhealthy’ foods. Participants were children aged 6-12 years (n=118), from two primary schools on the South Coast of NSW, Australia – a public school in a semi-rural suburb south of a sea-side city and a public school in a largely residential northern suburb of the same city. The children completed a questionnaire about motivations for snack choices, participated in an activity, completed two further questionnaires, selected snack foods from an in-class store, and participated in two rounds of an IAT ‘game’ pairing pictures of snack foods with positive and negative words. As hypothesized, the majority of children reported ‘healthiness’ as their primary motivator for snack food choice, but when faced with an actual ...
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