Pages that link to "Q36678447"
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The following pages link to Consumption stereotypes and impression management: how you are what you eat. (Q36678447):
Displaying 50 items.
- Eating under observation: a systematic review and meta-analysis of the effect that heightened awareness of observation has on laboratory measured energy intake (Q26801169) (← links)
- Early emerging system for reasoning about the social nature of food. (Q27315128) (← links)
- Development and feasibility testing of a smart phone based attentive eating intervention. (Q33439838) (← links)
- The social facilitation of eating or the facilitation of social eating? (Q33608555) (← links)
- What's that you're eating? Social comparison and eating behavior. (Q33612980) (← links)
- Mimicry of food intake: the dynamic interplay between eating companions (Q34152682) (← links)
- Dietary advice for muscularity, leanness and weight control in Men's Health magazine: a content analysis. (Q34346629) (← links)
- Social models provide a norm of appropriate food intake for young women (Q35043778) (← links)
- Influence of peers and friends on children's and adolescents' eating and activity behaviors. (Q36023979) (← links)
- Friends don't let friends eat cookies: effects of restrictive eating norms on consumption among friends (Q36239581) (← links)
- The role of familiarity on modeling of eating and food consumption in children (Q36511986) (← links)
- The ad-libitum alcohol 'taste test': secondary analyses of potential confounds and construct validity (Q36573412) (← links)
- Effects of social context on overweight and normal-weight children's food selection (Q36628015) (← links)
- The Effects of Liking Norms and Descriptive Norms on Vegetable Consumption: A Randomized Experiment (Q36740426) (← links)
- The Role of Social Norms in the Portion Size Effect: Reducing Normative Relevance Reduces the Effect of Portion Size on Consumption Decisions (Q36948653) (← links)
- The presence of friends increases food intake in youth. (Q37258390) (← links)
- Effects of social contexts on overweight and normal-weight children's food intake (Q37301557) (← links)
- The effects of different recruitment and incentive strategies for body acceptance programs on college women (Q37335409) (← links)
- Imitation of snack food intake among normal-weight and overweight children (Q37400712) (← links)
- Peers and Obesity during Childhood and Adolescence: A Review of the Empirical Research on Peers, Eating, and Physical Activity (Q37582491) (← links)
- Self-Other Differences in Perceiving Why People Eat What They Eat. (Q37642011) (← links)
- Social influences on eating: implications for nutritional interventions (Q38150557) (← links)
- Who are you trying to fool: does weight underreporting by dieters reflect self-protection or self-presentation? (Q38232908) (← links)
- Dish influences implicit gender-based food stereotypes among young Japanese adults (Q38475813) (← links)
- Health Communication With Same-Sex and Other-Sex Friends in Emerging Adulthood (Q39057621) (← links)
- Sex/gender differences in neural correlates of food stimuli: a systematic review of functional neuroimaging studies (Q39216412) (← links)
- Examining the effects of remote-video confederates on young women's food intake (Q39608094) (← links)
- "I'm ready to eat and grab whatever I can get": Determinants and patterns of African American men's eating practices. (Q40047291) (← links)
- The influence of gender stereotypes on eating habits among Costa Rican adolescents. (Q40183731) (← links)
- Food consumption patterns of adolescents aged 14-16 years in Kolkata, India. (Q40498860) (← links)
- The stigma of clean dieting and orthorexia nervosa (Q41520025) (← links)
- Social disparities in food preparation behaviours: a DEDIPAC study (Q41696535) (← links)
- Judgments of body weight based on food intake: a pervasive cognitive bias among restrained eaters (Q43769994) (← links)
- Desire to Be Underweight: Exploratory Study on a Weight Loss App Community and User Perceptions of the Impact on Disordered Eating Behaviors. (Q44943825) (← links)
- The power of social influence over food intake: examining the effects of attentional bias and impulsivity. (Q45837645) (← links)
- The unit size effect of indulgent food: how eating smaller sized items signals impulsivity and makes consumers eat less (Q47176724) (← links)
- Deconstructing the concept of the healthy eater self-schematic: Relations to dietary intake, weight and eating cognitions (Q47324727) (← links)
- Resolving the Meat-Paradox: A Motivational Account of Morally Troublesome Behavior and Its Maintenance (Q47426482) (← links)
- Stereotypical Disease Inferences From Gay/Lesbian Versus Heterosexual Voices (Q47686312) (← links)
- Social status and energy intake: a randomized controlled experiment. (Q47708762) (← links)
- Nutritional health, subjectivity and resistance: women's accounts of dietary practices (Q48214513) (← links)
- Effects of a healthy-eater self-schema and nutrition literacy on healthy-eating behaviors among Taiwanese college students. (Q49922103) (← links)
- Just Desserts? Exploring Constructions of Food in Women's Experiences of Bulimia. (Q50137669) (← links)
- Gender and Body-Fat Status as Predictors of Parental Feeding Styles and Children's Nutritional Knowledge, Eating Habits and Behaviours. (Q54985656) (← links)
- Healthy masculinities? How ostensibly healthy men talk about lifestyle, health and gender (Q56447083) (← links)
- Social Modeling of Food Intake: No Evidence for Moderation by Identification With the Norm Referent Group (Q61803854) (← links)
- Gender inequalities in diet quality and their socioeconomic patterning in a nutrition transition context in the Middle East and North Africa: a cross-sectional study in Tunisia (Q64067033) (← links)
- Internalised Weight Stigma Moderates the Impact of a Stigmatising Prime on Eating in the Absence of Hunger in Higher- but Not Lower-Weight Individuals (Q64257976) (← links)
- Peer influence on youth's snack purchases: a laboratory analog of convenience store shopping (Q84289811) (← links)
- The Snacking Chameleon: Psychological Proximity Increases Imitation of Food Intake Independently of Brand Choice (Q89878509) (← links)