Pages that link to "Q47261175"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
The following pages link to Beyond-brand effect of television food advertisements on food choice in children: the effects of weight status (Q47261175):
Displaying 50 items.
- Adolescent Maturational Transitions in the Prefrontal Cortex and Dopamine Signaling as a Risk Factor for the Development of Obesity and High Fat/High Sugar Diet Induced Cognitive Deficits (Q28079893) (← links)
- The relationship between hours of sleep, screen time and frequency of food and drink consumption in Spain in the 2011 and 2013 ALADINO: a cross-sectional study (Q28365059) (← links)
- Weighing the Evidence of Common Beliefs in Obesity Research (Q28384624) (← links)
- Electronic media in obesity prevention in childhood and adolescence (Q30244122) (← links)
- Popular Music Celebrity Endorsements in Food and Nonalcoholic Beverage Marketing (Q30389073) (← links)
- Reading the mind of children in response to food advertising: a cross-sectional study of Malaysian schoolchildren's attitudes towards food and beverages advertising on television. (Q30668012) (← links)
- Food advertising to children and its effects on diet: review of recent prevalence and impact data. (Q30938308) (← links)
- Neural responses to visual food stimuli after a normal vs. higher protein breakfast in breakfast-skipping teens: a pilot fMRI study (Q33664521) (← links)
- Psychosocial perspectives and the issue of prevention in childhood obesity (Q33978731) (← links)
- Sedentary behaviors, physical activity behaviors, and body fat in 6-year-old children: the generation R study (Q34091356) (← links)
- A pilot randomized trial of a cognitive reappraisal obesity prevention program (Q34647237) (← links)
- Longitudinal association between television watching and computer use and risk markers in diabetes in the SEARCH for Diabetes in Youth Study (Q34921641) (← links)
- How television fast food marketing aimed at children compares with adult advertisements (Q34981518) (← links)
- Child-oriented marketing techniques in snack food packages in Guatemala (Q35020780) (← links)
- Tween sex differences in snacking preferences during television viewing. (Q35188854) (← links)
- Adolescent Weight Status and Receptivity to Food TV Advertisements (Q35219035) (← links)
- WHO European Childhood Obesity Surveillance Initiative: associations between sleep duration, screen time and food consumption frequencies (Q35618030) (← links)
- Food packaging cues influence taste perception and increase effort provision for a recommended snack product in children. (Q35808298) (← links)
- Does food marketing need to make us fat? A review and solutions (Q36390850) (← links)
- Cross-sectional associations between high-deprivation home and neighbourhood environments, and health-related variables among Liverpool children (Q36526723) (← links)
- Characteristics of screen media use associated with higher BMI in young adolescents (Q36804235) (← links)
- The ventral pallidum and orbitofrontal cortex support food pleasantness inferences (Q36912627) (← links)
- Investigating the obesogenic effects of marketing snacks with toys: an experimental study in Latin America (Q37028907) (← links)
- The effect of neurohormonal factors, epigenetic factors, and gut microbiota on risk of obesity. (Q37293511) (← links)
- Adiposity and different types of screen time (Q37337408) (← links)
- Priming effects of television food advertising on eating behavior (Q37345865) (← links)
- Television food advertisement exposure and FTO rs9939609 genotype in relation to excess consumption in children (Q37553099) (← links)
- Using a research framework to identify knowledge gaps in research on food marketing to children in Australia (Q37561670) (← links)
- Receptivity to television fast-food restaurant marketing and obesity among U.S. youth. (Q37602635) (← links)
- Pharmacological management of appetite expression in obesity (Q37710372) (← links)
- Free will and the obesity epidemic (Q37933538) (← links)
- Randomized Controlled Trials Evaluating Effect of Television Advertising on Food Intake in Children: Why Such a Sensitive Topic is Lacking Top-Level Evidence? (Q38238182) (← links)
- Branded food references in children's magazines: 'advertisements' are the tip of the iceberg (Q38433727) (← links)
- Influence of product placement in children's movies on children's snack choices (Q38742348) (← links)
- Food advertising, children's food choices and obesity: interplay of cognitive defences and product evaluation: an experimental study (Q40306258) (← links)
- Variations in the Prevalence of Obesity Among European Countries, and a Consideration of Possible Causes (Q40339301) (← links)
- Impact of explained v. unexplained front-of-package nutrition labels on parent and child food choices: a randomized trial (Q40540055) (← links)
- Food and beverage cues in children's television programmes: the influence of programme genre (Q41157329) (← links)
- Mealtime exposure to food advertisements while watching television increases food intake in overweight and obese girls but has a paradoxical effect in boys (Q41544947) (← links)
- Food advertisements: to ban or not to ban? (Q42974938) (← links)
- Individual and family environment correlates differ for consumption of core and non-core foods in children. (Q44590541) (← links)
- A mixed-method examination of food marketing directed towards children in Australian supermarkets. (Q44604378) (← links)
- Food and beverage advertising during children's television programming. (Q45365724) (← links)
- Food and beverage cues in UK and Irish children-television programming (Q45839726) (← links)
- Physical activity patterns among school children in India. (Q50667570) (← links)
- Television advertising, not viewing, is associated with negative dietary patterns in children (Q50877824) (← links)
- Sustained impact of energy-dense TV and online food advertising on children's dietary intake: a within-subject, randomised, crossover, counter-balanced trial. (Q52591401) (← links)
- Socio-demographic and behavioral risk factors associated with the high prevalence of overweight and obesity in Portuguese children. (Q53104110) (← links)
- The short-term effects of television advertisements of cariogenic foods on children's dietary choices. (Q53118513) (← links)
- Food product design: emerging evidence for food policy. (Q53755388) (← links)