The Sun (Malaysia)

Emotion sways what a child snacks on

-

NEW US research has shown emotions can affect the food choices of children as young as four-and-a-half, with feelings of happiness or sadness influencin­g which snacks children choose, and how much they eat.

Carried out by psychologi­st Dr Shayla C. Holub at the University of Texas at Dallas along with Dr Cin Cin Tan at University of Michigan’s Centre for Human Growth and Developmen­t, the study published online in the journal Appetite looked at how mood affected the snack choice of 91 children aged four-anda-half to nine years old.

Participan­ts were placed into one of three mood conditions – happy, sad, or neutral, with the researcher­s using clips from Disney’s The Lion King to elicit the three feelings.

After observing the children’s snack consumptio­n in each condition, the pair found that children appeared to engage in emotional eating.

They found that when presented with different snack options, those in sad group consumed the most chocolate, followed by those in the happy group. Those in the neutral group ate the least chocolate.

When presented with savoury goldfish crackers, the findings were reversed, with children in the neutral condition consuming the most snacks, followed by those in the happy condition, with those in sad condition eating the least.

Holub commenting on the findings said: “This suggests that children eat in response to both happy and sad emotions, but more for sadness.”

The researcher­s also found that the tendency to eat in response to sad emotions appeared to increase with age, suggesting that emotional eating is in part a socialised behaviour.

“Very young kids are really good at regulating their food intake,” says Holub, “If you change the energy density of a baby’s formula content, the child adapts his or her food intake in response.

“If you give preschoole­rs a snack, they will adjust their meal intake to react appropriat­ely so that they are not too hungry or too full.”

As children get older however, they learn to associate certain foods with certain feelings.

“For example, you go to birthday parties and experience positive emotions – everyone has fun and gets candy or cake. And at holidays, it’s all about the food,” said Holub.

Children’s emotional eating habits can also be influenced by parents offering snacks when children are upset or bored, and certain foods can be made to seem more appealing by being forbidden by parents.

Although eating habits can be changed later in life, Holub stressed that setting healthy habits early in childhood to promote healthy eating for life is the best option.

“If we can learn how to nurture healthy habits early on, that makes us less likely to have to eliminate negative behaviours later,” she said. “The idea is to set up healthy trajectori­es and communicat­e with our children about how to choose healthy options.” – AFP-Relaxnews

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia