Let's look at leeks! Picture books increase toddlers' willingness to look at, taste and consume unfamiliar vegetables

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Abstract

Repeatedly looking at picture books about fruits and vegetables with parents enhances young children's visual preferences toward the foods in the book (Houston-Price et al., 2009a) and influences their willingness to taste these foods (Houston-Price et al., 2009b). This article explores whether the effects of picture book exposure are affected by infants' initial familiarity with and liking for the foods presented. In two experiments parents of 19- to 26-month-old toddlers were asked to read a picture book about a liked, disliked or unfamiliar fruit or vegetable with their child every day for 2 weeks. The impact of the intervention on both infants' visual preferences and their eating behavior was determined by the initial status of the target food, with the strongest effects for foods that were initially unfamiliar. Most strikingly, toddlers consumed more of the unfamiliar vegetable they had seen in their picture book than of a matched control vegetable. Results confirm the potential for picture books to play a positive role in encouraging healthy eating in young children. © 2014 Heath, Houston-Price and Kennedy.

Figures

  • Table 1 | Mean looking times toward target and control foods and mean total looking time differences (target—control) for the children in each condition of Experiment 1.
  • FIGURE 1 | Mean total looking time differences (in ms) for initially liked, disliked, and unfamiliar foods. Differences greater than 0ms indicate that children looked longer at target than control foods. One-sample t-tests against chance (0): ∗p = 0.02, ∗∗∗p < 0. 001. Pairwise comparison: ∗∗p = 0.002.
  • Table 2 | Number of children who tasted the foods reported by parents to be “liked” and “disliked,” the number who tasted each of these foods first, and mean ratings of the degree of encouragement required to persuade the child to taste each food (1 = very easy, 5 = very difficult) and amount of each food consumed (0 = none, 4 =
  • Table 3 | Number of children who tasted the target and control foods, the number who tasted each of these first, and mean ratings of the

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Heath, P., Houston-Price, C., & Kennedy, O. B. (2014). Let’s look at leeks! Picture books increase toddlers’ willingness to look at, taste and consume unfamiliar vegetables. Frontiers in Psychology, 5(MAR). https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00191

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