Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7308445 | Appetite | 2015 | 61 Pages |
Abstract
Research investigating the influence of the environmental and social factors on eating behaviours in free-living settings is limited. This study investigates the utility of using wearable camera images to assess the context of eating episodes. Adult participants (Nâ=â40) wore a SenseCam wearable camera for 4 days (including 1 familiarisation day) over a 15-day period in free-living conditions, and had their diet assessed using three image-assisted multiple-pass 24-hour dietary recalls. The images of participants' eating episodes were analysed and annotated according to their environmental and social contexts; including eating location, external environment (indoor/outdoor), physical position, social interaction, and viewing media screens. Data for 107 days were used, with a total of 742 eating episodes considered for annotation. Twenty nine per cent (214/742) of the episodes could not be categorised due to absent images (12%, nâ=â85), dark/blurry images (8%, nâ=â58), camera not worn (7%, nâ=â54) and for mixed reasons (2%, nâ=â17). Most eating episodes were at home (59%) and indoors (91%). Meals at food retailers were 24.8 minutes longer (95% CI: 13.4 to 36.2) and were higher in energy (mean differenceâ=â1196âkJ 95% CI: 242, 2149) than at home. Most episodes were seated at tables (27%) or sofas (26%), but eating standing (19%) or at desks (18%) were common. Social interaction was evident for 45% of episodes and media screens were viewed during 55% of episodes. Meals at home watching television were 3.1 minutes longer (95% CI: â0.6 to 6.7) and higher in energy intake than when no screen was viewed (543âkJ 95% CI: â32 to 1120). The environmental and social context that surrounds eating and dietary behaviours can be assessed using wearable camera images.
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Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Food Science
Authors
Luke Gemming, Aiden Doherty, Jennifer Utter, Emma Shields, Cliona Ni Mhurchu,