| Literature DB >> 29538666 |
Christopher Steven Marcum1, Megan R Goldring2, Colleen M McBride3, Susan Persky1.
Abstract
Background: Meal construction is largely governed by nonconscious and habit-based processes that can be represented as a collection of in dividual, micro-level food choices that eventually give rise to a final plate. Despite this, dietary behavior intervention research rarely captures these micro-level food choice processes, instead measuring outcomes at aggregated levels. This is due in part to a dearth of analytic techniques to model these dynamic time-series events. Purpose: The current article addresses this limitation by applying a generalization of the relational event framework to model micro-level food choice behavior following an educational intervention. Method: Relational event modeling was used to model the food choices that 221 mothers made for their child following receipt of an information-based intervention. Participants were randomized to receive either (a) control information; (b) childhood obesity risk information; (c) childhood obesity risk information plus a personalized family history-based risk estimate for their child. Participants then made food choices for their child in a virtual reality-based food buffet simulation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29538666 PMCID: PMC6693039 DOI: 10.1093/abm/kax041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Behav Med ISSN: 0883-6612