Parents commonly use rewards to encourage children to eat healthfully, but this practice remains controversial because rewards are suspected of undermining children's intrinsic motivation. A cluster-randomized trial examined children's acceptance of a disliked vegetable over 12 daily taste exposures. These exposures were paired with a tangible reward, a social reward, or no reward, and the findings were compared with the results from a no-treatment control condition. Liking and intake of the vegetable were assessed in a free-choice consumption task at preintervention, postintervention, 1 month after intervention, and 3 months after intervention. Liking increased more in the three intervention conditions than in the control condition, and th...
Purpose The strongest barrier for vegetable consumption in children is their preference for these fo...
Research has shown that seeing positive facial expressions (FEs) towards food increased children's d...
This study examined the effects of a novel treatment package consisting of Acceptance and Commitment...
Use of rewards to encourage children to eat healthily is commonplace among parents but remains contr...
Abstract Objective To examine whether parents offering a sticker reward to their child to taste a ve...
In a recent study, we showed that nonfood incentives combined with taste exposure increase children'...
The present study investigated the effectiveness of different strategies to increase the willingness...
Background Repeated taste exposure, in combination with small rewards, has been shown to increase ch...
Five experiments were conducted to investigate psychological determinants of food preference in fiv...
Previous research suggests that the use of modelling and non-food rewards may be effective at increa...
International audienceAcross the lifespan, eating is a common everyday act driven by the search for ...
Background: Children's vegetable consumption is below recommended amounts. According to self-determi...
Children learn to accept novel foods by repeated exposure to these foods. In the current study, we i...
Purpose The strongest barrier for vegetable consumption in children is their preference for these fo...
Research has shown that seeing positive facial expressions (FEs) towards food increased children's d...
This study examined the effects of a novel treatment package consisting of Acceptance and Commitment...
Use of rewards to encourage children to eat healthily is commonplace among parents but remains contr...
Abstract Objective To examine whether parents offering a sticker reward to their child to taste a ve...
In a recent study, we showed that nonfood incentives combined with taste exposure increase children'...
The present study investigated the effectiveness of different strategies to increase the willingness...
Background Repeated taste exposure, in combination with small rewards, has been shown to increase ch...
Five experiments were conducted to investigate psychological determinants of food preference in fiv...
Previous research suggests that the use of modelling and non-food rewards may be effective at increa...
International audienceAcross the lifespan, eating is a common everyday act driven by the search for ...
Background: Children's vegetable consumption is below recommended amounts. According to self-determi...
Children learn to accept novel foods by repeated exposure to these foods. In the current study, we i...
Purpose The strongest barrier for vegetable consumption in children is their preference for these fo...
Research has shown that seeing positive facial expressions (FEs) towards food increased children's d...
This study examined the effects of a novel treatment package consisting of Acceptance and Commitment...