A Social-Psychological Perspective on Food-Related Behavior (Recent Research in Psychology)

Type
Book
ISBN 10
0387970959 
ISBN 13
9780387970950 
Category
Unknown  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
1989 
Publisher
Pages
190 
Subject
Food--Psychological aspects 
Abstract
In a time when professionals in food and nutrition, health education, marketing, and psychology have intensified their efforts to promote beneficial eating patterns in the general population, this book intelligently analyzes the complex question, why do people eat what they eat?

The major aim of this book is to discuss issues surrounding the definitions, measurements, and determinants of food-related behavior. Using a social pyschological approach, Drs. Axelson and Brinberg focus on psychological concepts and their effects on individuals' food-related activity. Interest in the psychosocial determinants of food-related behavior has grown out of realization that socio-demographic factors account for a fairly low proportion of the variance observed in individuals' food consumption patterns.  
Description
Many of the diseases which afflict people in an affluent society like the United States seem to be related to food consumption (e.g., adult-onset diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, and colon cancer). In recent years, the health-related professions have become aware that their exclusive aim of disease treatment must be expanded to include health promotion. Professionals in food and nutrition, health education, social marketing, and psychology, as well as others have become interested in finding ways to promote healthy behaviors such as appropriate food consumption patterns. To modify food-related behavior, knowledge about why people eat what they eat is required. Both biological and sociocultural factors determine people's consumption behavior. This monograph, however, examines only the sociocultural determinants of individuals' food-related behaviors within their zone of biological indifference. The sociocultural variables are divided into two major categories - sociodemographic and psychological. Sociodemographic variables are often called external variables and include income, ethnicity, age, and the like. Psychosocial variables are thought to reflect the individual's internal state, and commonly examined variables include knowledge, beliefs, and attitudes. - from Amzon 
Biblio Notes
TX 357 A94 1989

A Social-Psychological Perspective on Food-Related Behavior (Recent Research in Psychology)

Marta L. Axelson; David Brinberg

Springer

1989

Food--Psychological aspects,  
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