Early Adolescents’ Food Selection After Evaluating the Healthiness of Remote Peers’ Food Choices
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Cobo Reyes Cano, Ramón; Lacomba Arias, Juan Antonio; Lagos García, Francisco Miguel; Reuben, Ernesto; Zenker, ChristinaEditorial
Wiley
Materia
Adolescents Food choices Peer effect
Fecha
2021Referencia bibliográfica
Publisher version: Cobo-Reyes R, Lacomba JA, Lagos F, Zenker C, Reuben E. Early Adolescents' Food Selection After Evaluating the Healthiness of Remote Peers' Food Choices. Child Dev. 2021 Nov;92(6):e1198-e1210. doi: 10.1111/cdev.13631
Patrocinador
Zayed University, R18023; MCINN-FEDER PGC2018-097811-B-I00; American University of Sharjah, FRG20Resumen
This study investigates whether asking early adolescents to evaluate the food choices of remote peers improves their own food selection. Participants were students from fifth (N = 219, Mage = 9.30 years) and sixth grades (N = 248, Mage = 10.28 years) of varying nationalities living in the United Arab Emirates (race and ethnicity were not collected). Students saw peers’ healthy or unhealthy food choices before picking their own food. In some conditions, students also critically evaluated the healthiness of the peers’ choices. Evalua- tion of peer choices led to healthier decisions (d = .53) to the point that it offsets the negative impact of observing unhealthy peer choices. This effect is larger for sixth graders compared to fifth graders.





