Abstract
Any attempt to influence children’s choice of food will only succeed if it deals realistically with all of the relevant factors. This chapter first specifies the scope that an understanding of food choice must cover, then presents some of the major findings from our studies in the area. These findings are used as a framework for a broader consideration of the kinds of processes involved. The unique role of food choice, at the centre of biological and social interaction, means that nutrition is influenced by many more things than just availability of nutritious food, and food choice has many implications for other aspects of life. Finally, the concepts developed in the chapter are applied to practical issues of effective advertising and marketing, and the potential for the food industry to use the complexity of food choice to make a positive contribution to family life.
Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Preview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Advertising Association (1994), Influences of Family Food Choice. Research by The Psychology Business. AA, London.
Birch, L.L. (1980), The relationship between children’s food preferences and those of their parents. J. Nutritional Education, 12, 14–18.
Birch, L.L. (1987), The acquisition of food acceptance patterns in children. In Eating Habits, Food, Physiology and Learned Behaviour, Boakes, RA., Popplewell, D.A., and Burton, M.J. (Eds), John Libbey, London, 107–130.
Birch, L.L., Billman, J. and Richards, S. (1984), Time of day influences food acceptability. Appetite, 5, 109–112.
Blundell, J.E. and Bauer, B. (1994), Eating disorders in relation to obesity: semantics or facts? In Obesity in Europe, Ditschuneit, H., Gries, F.A., Hauner, H., Schusdziarra, V. and Wechsler, J.G. (Eds), John Libbey, London.
Bryant-Waugh, R. and Lask, B. (1995), Annotation: eating disorders in children. J. Child Psychology & Psychiatry, 36, 191–202.
Dibb, S.E. (1993), Children: Advertisers’ Dream, Nutritional Nightmare? National Food Alliance, London.
Donkin, A.J.M., Neale, R.J. and Tilston, C. (1993), Children’s food purchase requests. 1st Food Choice Conference (1992, Brussels, Belgium). Appetite, 12, 291–294.
Erikson, E.H. (1963), Childhood and Society. Norton, New York.
Guillen, E.O. and Barr, S.I. (1994), Nutrition, dieting, and fitness messages in a magazine for adolescent women, 1970–1990. J. Adolescent Health, 15, 464–472.
Hanks, H. and Hobbs, C. (1993). Failure to thrive — a model for treatment. Bailliere’s Clinical Paediatrics, 1, 101–119.
Harper, L.V. and Sanders, K.M. (1975), The effects of adults’ eating on young children’s acceptance of unfamiliar foods. J. Exp. Child Psychology, 20, 206–214.
Hertzler, A.A. and Grun, I. (1990), Potential nutrition messages in magazines read by college students. Adolescence, 25, 717–724.
Hewstone, M. (1989), Causal Attribution. Blackwell, Oxford.
Martin, M.C. and Kennedy, P.F. (1993), Advertising and social comparison; consequences for female preadolescents and adolescents. Special Issue: The Pursuit of Beauty. Psychology and Marketing, 10, 513–530.
Mueller, C, Field, T., Yando, R. et al. (1995), Under-eating and over-eating concerns among adolescents. J. Child Psychology & Psychiatry, 36, 1019–1025.
Myers, P.N. Jr. and Biocca, F.A. (1992), The elastic body image; The effect of television advertising and programming on body image distortions in young women. J. Communications, 42, 108–133.
Ogletree, S.M., Williams, S.W., Raffeld, P. et al. (1990), Female attractiveness and eating disorders: Do children’s television commercials play a role? Sex-Roles, 22, 791–797.
Poskitt, E.M.E. (1994), The prevention of childhood obesity. In Obesity in Europe, Ditschuneit, H., Gries, F. A., Hauner, H., Schusdziarra, V. and Wechsler, J.G. (Eds), John Libbey, London, pp. 141–145.
Rajecki, D.W., McTavish, D.G., Rasmussen, J.L. et al. (1994), Violence, conflict, trickery, and other stories in T.V. ads for food for children. J. Appl. Social Psychology, 24, 1685–1700.
Stratton, P. (Ed.) (1982), Psychobiology of the Human Newborn. John Wiley & Sons, Chichester.
Stratton, P. (1994), The myths about children’s dietary choices. Admap, December 94, 20–24.
Stratton, P. (1995), Systemic interviewing and attributional analysis applied to international broadcasting. In Psychological Research: Innovative Methods and Strategies, Haworth, J. (Ed.), Routledge, London, pp. 1–14.
Stratton, P. (1996), Attributional coding of interview data. In An Introduction to Qualitative Methods Hayes, N. (Ed.), Routledge, London (in press).
Stratton, P., Preston-Shoot, M. and Hanks, H. (1990), Family Therapy: Training and Practice. Venture Press, Birmingham.
Tanner, J.M. (1978), Foetus Into Man. Open Books, London.
Taras, H.L., Sallis, J.F., Patterson, T.L. et al. (1989), Television’s influence on children’s diet and physical activity. J. Developmental & Behavioral Paediatrics, 10, 176–180.
Valsiner, J. (1987), Culture and the Development of Children’s Action. John Wiley & Sons, Chichester.
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 1997 Chapman & Hall
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Stratton, P. (1997). Influences on food choice within the family. In: Smith, G. (eds) Children’s Food. Springer, Boston, MA. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-1115-7_1
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-1115-7_1
Publisher Name: Springer, Boston, MA
Print ISBN: 978-1-4612-8424-6
Online ISBN: 978-1-4613-1115-7
eBook Packages: Springer Book Archive