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Publications [#271321] of Kelly D. Brownell

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Journal Articles

  1. Harris, JL; Bargh, JA; Brownell, KD (2009). Priming effects of television food advertising on eating behavior.. Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association, 28(4), 404-413. [doi]
    (last updated on 2024/04/19)

    Abstract:

    Objective

    Health advocates have focused on the prevalence of advertising for calorie-dense low-nutrient foods as a significant contributor to the obesity epidemic. This research tests the hypothesis that exposure to food advertising during TV viewing may also contribute to obesity by triggering automatic snacking of available food.

    Design

    In Experiments 1a and 1b, elementary-school-age children watched a cartoon that contained either food advertising or advertising for other products and received a snack while watching. In Experiment 2, adults watched a TV program that included food advertising that promoted snacking and/or fun product benefits, food advertising that promoted nutrition benefits, or no food advertising. The adults then tasted and evaluated a range of healthy to unhealthy snack foods in an apparently separate experiment.

    Main outcome measures

    Amount of snack foods consumed during and after advertising exposure.

    Results

    Children consumed 45% more when exposed to food advertising. Adults consumed more of both healthy and unhealthy snack foods following exposure to snack food advertising compared to the other conditions. In both experiments, food advertising increased consumption of products not in the presented advertisements, and these effects were not related to reported hunger or other conscious influences.

    Conclusion

    These experiments demonstrate the power of food advertising to prime automatic eating behaviors and thus influence far more than brand preference alone.

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