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1. Nutritional adequacy of dietary intake in women with anorexia nervosa.

4. List of Contributors

6. A non-invasive assessment of skin carotenoid status through reflection spectroscopy is a feasible, reliable and potentially valid measure of fruit and vegetable consumption in a diverse community sample

8. Immunodeficiency, Centromeric Instability, Facial Anomalies Syndrome Type 2 (ICF2): Combined Immunodeficiency, Autoimmune Phenomena, and Intellectual Disability

13. The use of external within-person variance estimates to adjust nutrient intake distributions over time and across populations.

14. Sensitivity of Pressure-Mediated Reflection Spectroscopy to Detect Changes in Skin Carotenoids in Adults Without Obesity in Response to Increased Carotenoid Intake: A Randomized Controlled Trial.

15. Biochemical Validation of a Self-Administered Carotenoid Intake Screener to Assess Carotenoid Intake in Nonobese Adults.

16. Incorporating the Dietary Guidelines for Americans Vegetable Recommendations into the Diet Alters Dietary Intake Patterns of Other Foods and Improves Diet Quality in Adults with Overweight and Obesity.

17. Consumption of Dietary Guidelines for Americans Types and Amounts of Vegetables Increases Mean Subjective Happiness Scale Scores: A Randomized Controlled Trial.

18. Increasing Vegetable Intake Decreases Urinary Acidity and Bone Resorption Marker in Overweight and Obese Adults: An 8-Week Randomized Controlled Trial.

19. Energy intake and season interact to influence physiological stress load among midlife women.

20. Consumption of a Variety of Vegetables to Meet Dietary Guidelines for Americans' Recommendations Does Not Induce Sensitization of Vegetable Reinforcement Among Adults with Overweight and Obesity: A Randomized Controlled Trial.

21. Impact of beef consumption on saturated fat intake in the United States adult population: Insights from modeling the influences of bovine genetics and nutrition.

22. Daily Protein Intake and Distribution of Daily Protein Consumed Decreases Odds for Functional Disability in Older Americans.

23. Criterion-Related Validity of Spectroscopy-Based Skin Carotenoid Measurements as a Proxy for Fruit and Vegetable Intake: A Systematic Review.

24. Concurrent validity of skin carotenoid status as a concentration biomarker of vegetable and fruit intake compared to multiple 24-h recalls and plasma carotenoid concentrations across one year: a cohort study.

25. Decreasing the Consumption of Foods with Sugar Increases Their Reinforcing Value: A Potential Barrier for Dietary Behavior Change.

26. Recognition of Federal Dietary Guidance Icons Is Associated with Greater Diet Quality.

27. Prospective Analysis of Vegetable Amount and Variety on the Risk of All-Cause and Cause-Specific Mortality among US Adults, 1999⁻2011.

28. Simple and sensitive dilute-and-shoot analysis of carotenoids in human plasma.

29. Americans' Perceptions about Fast Food and How They Associate with Its Consumption and Obesity Risk.

30. Depletion and repletion of fruit and vegetable intake alters serum bone turnover markers: a 28-week single-arm experimental feeding intervention.

31. Modeled replacement of traditional soybean and canola oil with high-oleic varieties increases monounsaturated fatty acid and reduces both saturated fatty acid and polyunsaturated fatty acid intake in the US adult population.

32. Greater vegetable variety and amount are associated with lower prevalence of coronary heart disease: National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1999-2014.

33. A non-invasive assessment of skin carotenoid status through reflection spectroscopy is a feasible, reliable and potentially valid measure of fruit and vegetable consumption in a diverse community sample.

34. Trends in linoleic acid intake in the United States adult population: NHANES 1999-2014.

35. Nutrient intake disparities in the US: modeling the effect of food substitutions.

36. Optical assessment of skin carotenoid status as a biomarker of vegetable and fruit intake.

37. Study design for a clinical trial to examine food price elasticity among participants in federal food assistance programs: A laboratory-based grocery store study.

38. Relationship between food waste, diet quality, and environmental sustainability.

39. A diet high in carotenoid-rich vegetables and fruits favorably impacts inflammation status by increasing plasma concentrations of IFN-α2 and decreasing MIP-1β and TNF-α in healthy individuals during a controlled feeding trial.

40. The History and Future of Dietary Guidance in America.

41. Capacity of the US Food System to Accommodate Improved Diet Quality: A Biophysical Model Projecting to 2030.

42. Characterizing trends in fruit and vegetable intake in the USA by self-report and by supply-and-disappearance data: 2001-2014.

43. Agricultural Capacity to Increase the Production of Select Fruits and Vegetables in the US: A Geospatial Modeling Analysis.

44. Smokers report lower intake of key nutrients than nonsmokers, yet both fall short of meeting recommended intakes.

45. Diet Quality Is Lower and Energy Intake Is Higher on Weekends Compared with Weekdays in Midlife Women: A 1-Year Cohort Study.

46. Diet quality on meatless days: National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), 2007-2012.

47. Relationship of the Reported Intakes of Fat and Fatty Acids to Body Weight in US Adults.

48. Time Trends and Patterns of Reported Egg Consumption in the U.S. by Sociodemographic Characteristics.

49. Whole Grains Contribute Only a Small Proportion of Dietary Fiber to the U.S. Diet.

50. Innovative Techniques for Evaluating Behavioral Nutrition Interventions.

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