"Sit down and eat": Daily associations between preschoolers' physical activity at dinner and parents' feeding coparenting and control.

IF 3.1 2区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL Developmental Psychology Pub Date : 2025-04-07 DOI:10.1037/dev0001953
Jackie A Nelson, Mariam Hafiz, Elizabeth Nuth, Melissa D Heinrich, Shayla C Holub
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Abstract

Although it is developmentally appropriate for preschoolers to be highly active, this physical activity level can be difficult for parents to manage at mealtime when children are asked to sit and focus on eating. We examined how children's physical activity levels across the week related to parents' feeding coparenting efforts and how parent feeding pressure and prompts to change the child's activity mediated these associations. From a sample of 100 families with a preschool-age child (3-5 years, 49% female, 59% White, 12% Black, 10% Hispanic, 26% low-income), home dinners with mothers and fathers present were recorded in 65 families for seven consecutive days (455 total meals observed). Coders rated meals for children's activity level and parents' prompts for activity change, pressuring feeding behaviors, and feeding coparenting support, undermining, and balance. Multilevel structural equation models tested direct and indirect associations at within-person and between-person levels. On days children were more active than usual, parents engaged in more supportive feeding coparenting and used more prompts for children's activity change. Fathers' increased prompts for activity change explained associations between child activity level and supportive feeding coparenting. Although fathers' feeding pressure related to more supportive and balanced feeding coparenting, it was not predicted by child activity level and, thus, did not mediate associations between child activity and feeding coparenting. At the between-person level, children who were more physically active had parents who engaged in more undermining feeding coparenting. Results are discussed in terms of the consistency of children's physical activity and fathers' feeding engagement. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).

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“坐下来吃饭”:学龄前儿童在晚餐时的身体活动与父母的喂养、养育和控制之间的日常联系。
虽然学龄前儿童高度活跃在发育上是合适的,但当孩子们被要求坐下来集中注意力吃饭时,这种身体活动水平对父母来说可能很难管理。我们研究了孩子一周内的身体活动水平与父母喂养的关系,以及父母喂养的压力和提示如何改变孩子的活动介导了这些联系。从100个有学龄前儿童的家庭(3-5岁,49%女性,59%白人,12%黑人,10%西班牙裔,26%低收入)的样本中,记录了65个家庭连续7天有父母在场的家庭晚餐(共观察到455顿饭)。编码员根据儿童的活动水平和父母对活动变化、压力喂养行为、喂养父母支持、破坏和平衡的提示来评估膳食。多层次结构方程模型测试了人与人之间和人与人之间的直接和间接联系。在孩子比平时更活跃的日子里,父母参与了更多的支持性喂养和亲子教育,并使用了更多的提示来改变孩子的活动。父亲增加的活动改变提示解释了儿童活动水平和支持喂养父母之间的联系。虽然父亲的喂养压力与更支持和平衡的喂养父母有关,但这并不是由儿童活动水平预测的,因此,儿童活动与喂养父母之间没有中介关系。在人与人之间的水平上,那些身体更活跃的孩子,他们的父母在喂养方面做得更糟糕。结果讨论了孩子的身体活动和父亲的喂养参与的一致性。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
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来源期刊
Developmental Psychology
Developmental Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL-
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
2.50%
发文量
329
期刊介绍: Developmental Psychology ® publishes articles that significantly advance knowledge and theory about development across the life span. The journal focuses on seminal empirical contributions. The journal occasionally publishes exceptionally strong scholarly reviews and theoretical or methodological articles. Studies of any aspect of psychological development are appropriate, as are studies of the biological, social, and cultural factors that affect development. The journal welcomes not only laboratory-based experimental studies but studies employing other rigorous methodologies, such as ethnographies, field research, and secondary analyses of large data sets. We especially seek submissions in new areas of inquiry and submissions that will address contradictory findings or controversies in the field as well as the generalizability of extant findings in new populations. Although most articles in this journal address human development, studies of other species are appropriate if they have important implications for human development. Submissions can consist of single manuscripts, proposed sections, or short reports.
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