831 research outputs found

    Beyond-brand effect of television food advertisements on food choice in children: The effects of weight status

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    Copyright Ā© The Authors 2007.Objective - To investigate the effect of television food advertising on childrenā€™s food intake, specifically whether childhood obesity is related to a greater susceptibility to food promotion. Design - The study was a within-subject, counterbalanced design. The children were tested on two occasions separated by two weeks. One condition involved the children viewing food advertisements followed by a cartoon, in the other condition the children viewed non-food adverts followed by the same cartoon. Following the cartoon, their food intake and choice was assessed in a standard paradigm. Setting - The study was conducted in Liverpool, UK. Subjects - Fifty-nine children (32 male, 27 female) aged 9ā€“11 years were recruited from a UK school to participate in the study. Thirty-three children were normal-weight (NW), 15 overweight (OW) and 11 obese (OB). Results - Exposure to food adverts produced substantial and significant increases in energy intake in all children (P < 0Ā·001). The increase in intake was largest in the obese children (P = 0Ā·04). All children increased their consumption of high-fat and/or sweet energy-dense snacks in response to the adverts (P < 0Ā·001). In the food advert condition, total intake and the intake of these specific snack items correlated with the childrenā€™s modified age- and gender-specific body mass index score. Conclusions - These data suggest that obese and overweight children are indeed more responsive to food promotion, which specifically stimulates the intake of energy-dense snacks.University of Liverpoo

    The Indian family on UK reality television: Convivial culture in salient contexts

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    This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final published article is available from the link below, copyright 2012 @ the author.This article demonstrates how The Family (2009), a fly-on-the wall UK reality series about a British Indian family, facilitates both current public service broadcasting requirements and mass audience appeal. From a critical cultural studies perspective, the author examines the journalistic and viewer responses to the series where authenticity, universality, and comedy emerge as major themes. Textual analysis of the racialized screen representations also helps locate the series within the contexts of contested multiculturalism, genre developments in reality television and public service broadcasting. Paul Gilroyā€™s concept of convivial culture is used as a frame in understanding how meanings of the series are produced within a South Asian popular representational space. The author suggests that the social comedy taxonomy is a prerequisite for the making of this particular observational documentary. Further, the popular (comedic) mode of conviviality on which the series depends is both expedient and necessary within the various sociopolitical contexts outlined

    Real time Pattern Based Melodic Query for Music Continuation System

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    This paper presents a music continuation system using pattern matching to find patterns within a library of MIDI files using a realtime algorithm to build a system which can be used as interactive DJ system. This paper also looks at the influence of different kinds of pattern matching on MIDI file analysis. Many pattern-matching algorithms have been developed for text analysis, voice recognition and Bio-informatics but as the domain knowledge and nature of the problems are different these algorithms are not ideally suitable for real time MIDI processing for interactive music continuation system. By taking patterns in real-time, via MIDI keyboard, the system searches patterns within a corpus of MIDI files and continues playing from the user's musical input. Four different types of pattern matching are used in this system (i.e. exact pattern matching, reverse pattern matching, pattern matching with mismatch and combinatorial pattern matching in a single system). After computing the results of the four types of pattern matching of each MIDI file, the system compares the results and locates the highest pattern matching possibility MIDI file within the library

    Eating behaviour, behavioural problems and sensory profiles of children with avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID), autistic spectrum disorders or picky eating: same or different?

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    Background Not much is known at present about the behavioural and sensory profiles of children with avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID), the newest addition to the eating disorder diagnostic category in DSM-V. Our aims were to examine eating difficulties, behavioural problems and sensory hypersensitivity in ARFID children, relative to typically developing children with no reported feeding, mental or physical health problems, as well as children with autistic spectrum disorders (ASD; typically associated with a high prevalence of eating problems) or Picky Eating (PE). Methods Four hundred and eighty-six parents of children with ARFID (nā€Æ=ā€Æ29), ASD (nā€Æ=ā€Æ56), PE (nā€Æ=ā€Æ143) or no reported difficulties (nā€Æ=ā€Æ259) completed (online) the Behavioral Pediatric Feeding Assessment Scale, the Child Eating Behaviour Questionnaire, Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire, and the Sensory Experiences Questionnaire about the children. Results The ARFID, ASD and PE groups had eating difficulties, behavioural problems and sensory hypersensitivity, relative to the typically developing group, and differed significantly on only some of the dimensions assessed. Specifically, the ARFID group had the lowest food-responsiveness and differed significantly from the PE and typically developing (but not from ASD) groups while the ASD group had significantly greater behavioural problems and social and non-social sensitivity than all other groups. Conclusions Notable overlap in eating difficulties, behavioural problems and sensory profiles of children with ARFID, ASD or PE, with more severe aberrations in ARFID (food-responsiveness) and ASD (hypersensitivity and social problems) on specific dimensions, argue for a dimensional approach to improve therapy and management of children with these disorders

    Learning the rules of the ā€˜student gameā€™: Transforming the ā€˜student habitusā€™ through [im]mobility

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    In recent years, a growing body of literature has emerged concerning the mobilities of students, specifically relating to the interactions between local and non-local students, which can accentuate unequal access to education; social interactions and learner outcomes. Central to much of this literature is a sense that being mobile in institutional choice is the most appropriate and expected approach to successful university life. Conversely, local students, disadvantaged by their age, history, external commitments and immobility, are thought to be unlikely to share the same ā€˜student experiencesā€™ as their traditional counterparts, leading to feelings of alienation within the student community. This paper will seek to problematise this binary by examining the experiences of a group of local and non-local students studying at the University of Portsmouth using Bourdieuā€™s reading of habitus and capital. This is useful as it provides a more critical insight into how studentsā€™ [dis]advantaged learner identities are [re]produced through their everyday sociability. Moreover, these findings extend previous discussions of first year transitions by questioning the influence of accommodation upon the formation of identities and the initial experiences of ā€˜beingā€™, or ā€˜becomingā€™ students. This paper also seeks to extend previous theoretical tendencies that privilege identity formation through mobility rather than stasis
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