Pearce Alaina L, Adise Shana, Roberts Nicole J, White Corey, Geier Charles F, Keller Kathleen L
Nutritional Sciences, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, 16802, United States of America.
Psychiatry, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, 05401, United States of America.
Physiol Behav. 2020 Sep 1;223:112990. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2020.112990. Epub 2020 Jun 4.
In order to improve dietary quality among children, there is a need to understand how they make decisions about what foods to eat. This study used a mouse tracking food choice task to better understand how attributes such as health and taste contribute to food decisions among 70 children aged 7-to-11 years old. Children rated health, taste, and desire to eat for 76 common foods that varied in energy density and then used a computer mouse to select which of two presented foods they would like to eat. The presented food pairs were based on children's own ratings of taste and health so that some trials required self-control to choose the healthier option (i.e., healthy/not tasty paired with unhealthy/tasty). Children's body mass index (BMI) percentile was not associated with number of healthy choices. To examine mouse trajectories, we replicated previous analytic techniques and applied a novel technique, time-varying effects modeling (TVEM). Results showed that desire to eat impacted food decision-making sooner than taste and health during trials that required self-control, with TVEM showing that early discounting of desire to eat enabled healthier choices. However, these temporal dynamics varied by age, BMI percentile, and overall self-control performance in the task. When the less healthy food was chosen (i.e., self-control failure), older children and children with better overall self-control were more influenced by taste and desire to eat. However, children with higher BMI percentiles showed stronger discounting (i.e., negative influence) of taste when choosing the healthier food. Together this highlights how the influence of hedonic food attributes on food decision-making varies by individual child-level characteristics. Understanding individual differences in the cognitive processes that support healthy food choices in children may help identify targets for interventions aimed at improving child nutrition.
为了提高儿童的饮食质量,有必要了解他们如何做出关于吃什么食物的决定。本研究使用了一项鼠标追踪食物选择任务,以更好地理解健康和口味等属性如何影响70名7至11岁儿童的食物决策。孩子们对76种能量密度不同的常见食物的健康程度、口味和想吃的欲望进行了评分,然后使用电脑鼠标选择他们想吃的两种展示食物中的哪一种。展示的食物对是基于孩子们自己对口味和健康的评分,所以有些试验需要自我控制才能选择更健康的选项(即健康/不好吃的与不健康/好吃的配对)。儿童的体重指数(BMI)百分位数与健康选择的数量无关。为了研究鼠标轨迹,我们复制了以前的分析技术,并应用了一种新技术,即时变效应建模(TVEM)。结果表明,在需要自我控制的试验中,想吃的欲望比口味和健康更早地影响食物决策,TVEM显示,早期抑制想吃的欲望能使选择更健康。然而,这些时间动态因年龄、BMI百分位数和任务中的总体自我控制表现而异。当选择了不太健康的食物时(即自我控制失败),年龄较大的儿童和总体自我控制较好的儿童更容易受到口味和想吃欲望的影响。然而,BMI百分位数较高的儿童在选择更健康的食物时,对口味的抑制作用更强(即负面影响)。这些共同凸显了享乐性食物属性对食物决策的影响如何因儿童个体特征而异。了解支持儿童健康食物选择的认知过程中的个体差异,可能有助于确定旨在改善儿童营养的干预目标。