| Literature DB >> 26222624 |
Laura Turner1, Bridget Kelly2, Emma Boyland3, Adrian E Bauman4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Children's exposure to food marketing is one environmental determinant of childhood obesity. Measuring the extent to which children are aware of food brands may be one way to estimate relative prior exposures to food marketing. This study aimed to develop and validate an Australian Brand Awareness Instrument (ABAI) to estimate children's food brand awareness.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26222624 PMCID: PMC4519263 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0133972
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Sample flash card.
Mean score of responses for the brand recall, brand recognition and total brand awareness for each age category.
| Age (Years) | Recall Mean (SD) | Recognition Mean (SD) | Total Brand Awareness Mean (SD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7 ( | 10.7 (5.4) | 9.8 (2.3) | 20.3 (7.0) |
| 8 ( | 12.6 (4.7) | 10.1 (1.6) | 22.8 (6.0) |
| 9 ( | 14.5 (5.9) | 10.9 (3.0) | 25.5 (8.8) |
| 10 ( | 19.9 (1.5) | 12.8 (2.0) | 32.7 (6.4) |
| 11 ( | 22.7 (2.5) | 13.7 (1.0) | 36.3 (3.5) |
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♦Average scores for the brand naming task (1 point for each correct answer), maximum score 30
ʈ Average scores for the brand-product association task (0.5 point for each correct answer), maximum score 15
Mean number of correct responses and mean score of responses for the recall and recognition tasks for each of the ‘big 5’ categories.
| Big 5 Category | Recall: mean number of correct responses (SD) | Recognition |
|---|---|---|
| Fast Food | 5.2 (1.2) | 5.6 (0.7) |
| Confectionary | 3.0 (1.6) | 4.8 (1.3) |
| Sugary Drinks | 2.9 (2.0) | 4.1 (1.5) |
| Sugary Cereals | 1.7 (1.5) | 3.6 (1.5) |
| Salted Snacks | 1.3 (1.6) | 3.4 (1.5) |
* Each correct response for recognition allocated a score of 0.5
Linear regression outputs.
| Variable | Unstandardized β | t-value | 95% CI | R2 | P value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 3.884 | 5.54 | 2.481, 5.288 | 0.346 | <0.001 |
| TV viewing | -0.002 | -0.821 | -0.008, 0.004 | 0.011 | 0.415 |
| Internet usage | -0.002 | -0.703 | -0.009, 0.004 | 0.008 | 0.485 |
| Total screen time | -0.001 | -0.560 | -0.006, -0.003 | 0.005 | 0.578 |
| Food consumption score | 0.407 | 0.971 | -0.432, 1.247 | 0.016 | 0.335 |
† Cumulative minutes per week
Fig 2Bland-Altman plots assessing the validity of the ABAI-a v. the ABAI for recall, recognition and total brand awareness (with and without one outlier) among children (n 30) aged 7–11 yrs, Illawarra, Australia, July-Aug 2014.
Plots show the mean difference (centre horizontal lines), and the 95% limits of agreement (dotted lines) for: (a) brand recall, (b) brand recognition, (c) total brand awareness (with outlier), (d) total brand awareness (outlier removed).
Consistency between responses for the ABAI and ABAI-a.
| Measure | Difference ABAI-a—ABAI Mean (SD) | 95% LOA | % difference |
|---|---|---|---|
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| 0.57 (3.96) | -7.20–8.34 | 4.17% |
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| 0.38 (2.174) | -3.95–4.57 | 2.90% |
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| 1.34 (6.19) | -10.78–3.47 | 5.62% |
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| 0.75 (5.36) | -9.76–11.26 | 3.09% |
LOA—Limits of agreement; ABAI—Australian Food Brand Awareness
ŧMean difference ± 1.96 × SD of difference
ʈ(ABAI-a Mean—ABAI Mean/ABAI Mean)*100
p < 0.05*; p < 0.01**
Test-retest reliability of the ABAI (n = 27).
| Measure | First ABAI Mean (SD) | Second ABAI Mean (SD) | ICC ( |
|---|---|---|---|
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| 15.4 (7.03) | 17.6 (6.90) | 0.941 ( |
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| 11.1 (2.35) | 12.0 (2.20) | 0.831 ( |
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| 26.5 (9.16) | 29.6 (8.57) | 0.927 ( |