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Habit strength and between-meal snacking in daily life: the moderating role of level of education

Authors :
Rob J. H. van Bree
Lilian Lechner
Mira Duif
Saskia Wouters
Viviane Thewissen
Nele Jacobs
Department Clinical Psychology
RS-Research Line Clinical psychology (part of IIESB program)
Section Lifespan Psychology
RS-Research Line Lifespan psychology (part of IIESB program)
RS-Research Program The Interaction between Implicit and Explicit Strategies for Behaviour (IIESB)
Faculty Psychology and Educational Sciences
Department Health Psychology
RS-Research Line Health psychology (part of IIESB program)
RS: MHeNs - R2 - Mental Health
Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie
Source :
Wouters, S, Thewissen, V, Duif, M, van Bree, R J, Lechner, L & Jacobs, N 2018, ' Habit strength and between-meal snacking in daily life : the moderating role of level of education ', Public Health Nutrition, vol. 21, no. 14, pp. 2595-2605 . https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980018001283, Public Health Nutrition, 21(14), 2595-2605. Cambridge University Press
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2018.

Abstract

ObjectiveRecent research emphasizes the importance of habit in explaining patterns of energy intake and choices of consumption. However, the nature of the association between habit strength and snacking has not been explored for all types of between-meal snacks.DesignMultilevel linear techniques were used to: (i) examine the association between habit strength and moment-to-moment energy intake (kilocalories) from snacks in daily life; and (ii) determine whether gender, age, level of education and BMI moderate the association between habit strength and moment-to-moment energy intake from snacks. A smartphone application based on the experience sampling method was used to map momentary between-meal snack intake in the context of daily life. Demographics and habit strength were assessed with an online composite questionnaire.SettingThis research was performed in the Netherlands in the natural environment of participants’ daily life.SubjectsAdults (n 269) aged 20–50 years.ResultsHabit strength was significantly associated with moment-to-moment energy intake from between-meal snacks in daily life: the higher the strength of habit to snack between meals, the higher the amount of momentary energy intake from snacks. The association between habit strength and moment-to-moment energy intake from snacks was moderated by education level. Additional analyses showed that habit strength was significantly associated with moment-to-moment energy intake from between-meal snacks in the low to middle level of education group.ConclusionsIt is recommended to address habitual between-meal snacking in future interventions targeting low- to middle-educated individuals.

Details

ISSN :
14752727 and 13689800
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Public Health Nutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1a8206ef5c9430b5aa2668d4f6e8cda9