Measuring the impact of classmates on children’s liking of school meals

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Measuring the impact of classmates on children’s liking of school meals. / Andersen, Sidse Schoubye; Vassard, Ditte; Havn, Louis; Damsgaard, Camilla Trab; Biltoft-Jensen, Anja; Holm, Lotte.

In: Food Quality and Preference, Vol. 52, 2016, p. 87-95.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Andersen, SS, Vassard, D, Havn, L, Damsgaard, CT, Biltoft-Jensen, A & Holm, L 2016, 'Measuring the impact of classmates on children’s liking of school meals', Food Quality and Preference, vol. 52, pp. 87-95. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodqual.2016.03.018

APA

Andersen, S. S., Vassard, D., Havn, L., Damsgaard, C. T., Biltoft-Jensen, A., & Holm, L. (2016). Measuring the impact of classmates on children’s liking of school meals. Food Quality and Preference, 52, 87-95. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodqual.2016.03.018

Vancouver

Andersen SS, Vassard D, Havn L, Damsgaard CT, Biltoft-Jensen A, Holm L. Measuring the impact of classmates on children’s liking of school meals. Food Quality and Preference. 2016;52:87-95. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodqual.2016.03.018

Author

Andersen, Sidse Schoubye ; Vassard, Ditte ; Havn, Louis ; Damsgaard, Camilla Trab ; Biltoft-Jensen, Anja ; Holm, Lotte. / Measuring the impact of classmates on children’s liking of school meals. In: Food Quality and Preference. 2016 ; Vol. 52. pp. 87-95.

Bibtex

@article{eba3d0ac8eaf4d628dabc1d64f07551b,
title = "Measuring the impact of classmates on children{\textquoteright}s liking of school meals",
abstract = "In this paper we investigate how children respond to a new type of school meal and ask whether classmates affect meal evaluations. The study is part of a school meal intervention which tested health effects of the New Nordic Diet. Over two separate three-month periods 834 pupils (age 8–11) from 9 schools (46 classes) were given either meals based on the Nordic diet or their usual packed lunch. The children rated their regular lunch packs and the Nordic meals on a five-point smiley scale when they reported their lunch intake. Ratings were done at home by the child, alone or with the help of a parent. The results show that the classmates influenced children{\textquoteright}s ranking of a new type of school meal but did not influence rankings of familiar lunch packs. These results are important not only because they add to our knowledge of the social dimension of liking, but also because they show that we should attend to social mechanisms when implementing new health-promoting food initiatives among children in schools.",
author = "Andersen, {Sidse Schoubye} and Ditte Vassard and Louis Havn and Damsgaard, {Camilla Trab} and Anja Biltoft-Jensen and Lotte Holm",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1016/j.foodqual.2016.03.018",
language = "English",
volume = "52",
pages = "87--95",
journal = "Food Quality and Preference",
issn = "0950-3293",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Measuring the impact of classmates on children’s liking of school meals

AU - Andersen, Sidse Schoubye

AU - Vassard, Ditte

AU - Havn, Louis

AU - Damsgaard, Camilla Trab

AU - Biltoft-Jensen, Anja

AU - Holm, Lotte

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - In this paper we investigate how children respond to a new type of school meal and ask whether classmates affect meal evaluations. The study is part of a school meal intervention which tested health effects of the New Nordic Diet. Over two separate three-month periods 834 pupils (age 8–11) from 9 schools (46 classes) were given either meals based on the Nordic diet or their usual packed lunch. The children rated their regular lunch packs and the Nordic meals on a five-point smiley scale when they reported their lunch intake. Ratings were done at home by the child, alone or with the help of a parent. The results show that the classmates influenced children’s ranking of a new type of school meal but did not influence rankings of familiar lunch packs. These results are important not only because they add to our knowledge of the social dimension of liking, but also because they show that we should attend to social mechanisms when implementing new health-promoting food initiatives among children in schools.

AB - In this paper we investigate how children respond to a new type of school meal and ask whether classmates affect meal evaluations. The study is part of a school meal intervention which tested health effects of the New Nordic Diet. Over two separate three-month periods 834 pupils (age 8–11) from 9 schools (46 classes) were given either meals based on the Nordic diet or their usual packed lunch. The children rated their regular lunch packs and the Nordic meals on a five-point smiley scale when they reported their lunch intake. Ratings were done at home by the child, alone or with the help of a parent. The results show that the classmates influenced children’s ranking of a new type of school meal but did not influence rankings of familiar lunch packs. These results are important not only because they add to our knowledge of the social dimension of liking, but also because they show that we should attend to social mechanisms when implementing new health-promoting food initiatives among children in schools.

U2 - 10.1016/j.foodqual.2016.03.018

DO - 10.1016/j.foodqual.2016.03.018

M3 - Journal article

VL - 52

SP - 87

EP - 95

JO - Food Quality and Preference

JF - Food Quality and Preference

SN - 0950-3293

ER -

ID: 160635413