Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2976526132> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2976526132 endingPage "e13191" @default.
- W2976526132 startingPage "e13191" @default.
- W2976526132 abstract "Why do we eat? Our motives for eating are diverse, ranging from hunger and liking to social norms and affect regulation. Although eating motives can vary from eating event to eating event, which implies substantial moment-to-moment differences, current ways of measuring eating motives rely on single timepoint questionnaires that assess eating motives as situation-stable dispositions (traits). However, mobile technologies including smartphones allow eating events and motives to be captured in real time and real life, thus capturing experienced eating motives in-the-moment (states).This study aimed to examine differences between why people think they eat (trait motives) and why they eat in the moment of consumption (state motives) by comparing a dispositional (trait) and an in-the-moment (state) assessment of eating motives.A total of 15 basic eating motives included in The Eating Motivation Survey (ie, liking, habit, need and hunger, health, convenience, pleasure, traditional eating, natural concerns, sociability, price, visual appeal, weight control, affect regulation, social norms, and social image) were assessed in 35 participants using 2 methodological approaches: (1) a single timepoint dispositional assessment and (2) a smartphone-based ecological momentary assessment (EMA) across 8 days (N=888 meals) capturing eating motives in the moment of eating. Similarities between dispositional and in-the-moment eating motive profiles were assessed according to 4 different indices of profile similarity, that is, overall fit, shape, scatter, and elevation. Moreover, a visualized person × motive data matrix was created to visualize and analyze between- and within-person differences in trait and state eating motives.Similarity analyses yielded a good overall fit between the trait and state eating motive profiles across participants, indicated by a double-entry intraclass correlation of 0.52 (P<.001). However, although trait and state motives revealed a comparable rank order (r=0.65; P<.001), trait motives overestimated 12 of 15 state motives (P<.001; d=1.97). Specifically, the participants assumed that 6 motives (need and hunger, price, habit, sociability, traditional eating, and natural concerns) are more essential for eating than they actually were in the moment (d>0.8). Furthermore, the visualized person × motive data matrix revealed substantial interindividual differences in intraindividual motive profiles.For a comprehensive understanding of why we eat what we eat, dispositional assessments need to be extended by in-the-moment assessments of eating motives. Smartphone-based EMAs reveal considerable intra- and interindividual differences in eating motives, which are not captured by single timepoint dispositional assessments. Targeting these differences between why people think they eat what they eat and why they actually eat in the moment may hold great promise for tailored mobile health interventions facilitating behavior changes." @default.
- W2976526132 created "2019-10-03" @default.
- W2976526132 creator A5006417854 @default.
- W2976526132 creator A5050342469 @default.
- W2976526132 creator A5050433080 @default.
- W2976526132 creator A5053489770 @default.
- W2976526132 creator A5063554023 @default.
- W2976526132 creator A5067091709 @default.
- W2976526132 creator A5080670617 @default.
- W2976526132 creator A5086886537 @default.
- W2976526132 date "2020-01-07" @default.
- W2976526132 modified "2023-10-12" @default.
- W2976526132 title "Why We Eat What We Eat: Assessing Dispositional and In-the-Moment Eating Motives by Using Ecological Momentary Assessment" @default.
- W2976526132 cites W1886639674 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W193104787 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W1946903833 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W1963950506 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W1965992888 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W1969543129 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W1971312155 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W1973572878 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W1987997862 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W1993708032 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W1994544878 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W1994645569 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W1995562872 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W1996038988 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2005314704 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2014361739 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2015918699 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2019004439 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2020846429 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2023944159 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2025711163 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2037007682 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2038007153 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2055765759 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2056218184 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2057878155 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2060269913 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2060770236 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2070953866 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2077812886 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2081232817 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2087577928 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2088064680 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2091698281 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2092090987 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2093656290 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2094181737 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2096016260 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2103103168 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2107732097 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2108410221 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2112880224 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2116790911 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2127283001 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2128971256 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2132870902 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2133270419 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2134862918 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2141523763 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2155002669 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2162206011 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2163227443 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2165831945 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2170494295 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2195982790 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2264506206 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2264704509 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2328171598 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2338864525 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2341244791 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2409505923 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2480133395 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2530800089 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2550890882 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2576222632 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2585562928 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2587004424 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2589024639 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2602677821 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2605835232 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2620406790 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2735376054 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2735638749 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2752096960 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2765894352 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2766140663 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2766885671 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2773400618 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2780097806 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2799695238 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2889622602 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2897199798 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W2900090645 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W3020962338 @default.
- W2976526132 cites W3036967522 @default.