4.6 Article

Comparison of implicit and explicit attitudes towards food between normal- and overweight French children

Journal

FOOD QUALITY AND PREFERENCE
Volume 60, Issue -, Pages 145-153

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodqual.2017.04.013

Keywords

Attitude; Child; Obesity; Hedonic; Food

Funding

  1. ANR [ANR-15-CE21-0014]
  2. Regional Council of Burgundy France (PARI Agral 1)
  3. ERDF (European Regional Development Found)
  4. Nutrition, Chemical Food Safety and Consumer Behavior Division of INRA (French National Institute for Agronomical Research, France)
  5. Regional Council of Burgundy (France)
  6. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-15-CE21-0014] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)

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In the food domain, attitudes reflect one's acquired predisposition towards food and combine hedonic and nutritional components. Implicit attitudes are assumed to influence spontaneous behaviors, whereas explicit attitudes are assumed to influence deliberative behaviors. The aim of this study was to compare hedonic-versus nutrition-based attitudes towards food between normal-and overweight children using both implicit and explicit tasks. Normal-weight (n = 81; mean BMI z-score = 0.06 +/- 0.97) and overweight children (n = 57; mean BMI z-score = 3.5 +/- 1.17) performed three tasks: an implicit pairing task in which they had to choose the two food items that go best together for 11 triplets that were either hedonically or nutritionally associated; an explicit forced-choice categorization task in which they were asked to categorize 48 foods into one of the following four categories: yummy, yucky (i.e., hedonic categories), makes you strong, or makes you fat (i.e., nutritional categories); a liking task in which they had to assign liking scores to the same 48 food items. No effect of weight status on the liking scores by food groups (all P > 0.44) or on the implicit pairing task (P = 0.82) were found; however, on the explicit categorization task, overweight children chose more nutritional categories than their lean peers (P = 0.001). Cluster analysis showed higher proportion of dissonant attitudinal pattern (characterized by many hedonic pairings but few hedonic categorizations) in overweight compared with normal-weight children. Thus, a discrepancy between implicit hedonic and explicit nutritional attitudes is more common in overweight children than in normal-weight children. Further studies are needed to understand the behavioral implications of such discrepancy in attitudes towards food in children.

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