22
Nov 17

The Obesity Society Conference 2017

We had a great representation of COPT fellows at The Obesity Society (TOS) annual conference in Oxon Hill, Maryland from Oct 30 – Nov 2, 2017. Check out our recaps of each presentation! 

COPT fellows past and present with the directors Front (left to right): Faris Zuraikat, Nicole Fearbach, Allison Hepworth Middle: Elizabeth Adams, Barbara Rolls, Kathleen Keller, Katherine Balantekin, Sally Eagleton, Alissa Smethers Back: Samantha Kling, Travis Masterson, Jennifer Savage Williams, Alyssa Spaw

Elizabeth Adams

What was the title of your poster/talk?

  • “Applying Multiphase Optimization Strategy to Manage Children’s Intake of Candy: A Feasibility Study” (Oral presentation)
  • “Patterns of Gestational Weight Gain and Large-for-Gestational Age Across Consecutive Pregnancies” (Poster presentation)

What were the main points of your presentation?

  • We demonstrated the feasibility of a family-based intervention to provide parents with alternatives to restrictive feeding practices (e.g. shared decision making, establishing expectations and routines) for managing children’s intake of candy. This study used a novel design called Multiphase Optimization Strategy (MOST), which allowed us to test the effectiveness of each individual intervention component, rather than just the intervention as a whole.
  • We quantified gestational weight gain (GWG) longitudinally across women’s 1st and 2nd pregnancies to find that women who exceeded the Institute of Medicine GWG guidelines in their 1st pregnancy had increased odds of exceeding guidelines in their 2nd pregnancy, independent of postpartum weight retention and inter-pregnancy interval (i.e. duration between women’s 1st and 2nd pregnancies). Further, exceeding GWG guidelines increased the odds of infants born large-for-gestational age in women’s first but not second-born infants, independent of pre-pregnancy body mass index.

What was something you learned while at TOS?

  • One of the most valuable sessions I attended was the Early Career Pre-Conference Networking event. During the break-out sessions, I learned more about Career Development (K) Awards from a NIH program officer, which was really beneficial to planning my future career goals. I also thought the keynote speaker of this event had great insight. Dr. Elizabeth Mayer-Davis from UNC Chapel Hill advised that during the day-to-day challenges of academia, we always keep the big picture in mind that we are make a difference in helping people to improve their health.

Elizabeth Adams sharing her work during one of the poster sessions

Travis Masterson

What was the title of your poster/talk?

  • “Brain reactivity to visual food stimuli after food commercial exposure in children” 
What were the main points of your presentation?
  •  We shared results from our study showing that exposure to food commercials can interfere with brain response to food cues in the environment. In particular, regions associated with visual processing, control, and decision making were affected. Interference in these regions may help explain the intake promoting effect of food commercials in children.  
What was something you learned while at TOS?
  • One of the symposiums this year was focused around the food environment, public policy, and food marketing. During this symposium we were able to hear from both research scientists and marketing consultants. They spoke about the need to involve the general public in conversations around food marketing and try to garner public support for policy change. They also made the point that health promotion campaigns to inform and motivate the public about obesity prevention and treatment can be more effective if they are focused around positive emotions and community involvement. 

Allison Hepworth

What was the title of your poster/talk?

  • I presented two posters at Obesity Week 2017:
    • “A new conceptual model of information seeking and use can inform obesity prevention and treatment:
    • “Food marketing through social media influencers: Sponsorship on food blogs focused on child feeding”
What were the main points of your presentation?
  •  In my first poster, I presented a new conceptual model that aims to explain the entire information seeking and use process. The Information Seeking and Use (ISU) model combines information theories with theories of behavior change that can be broadly applied across health behaviors, including those related to obesity. This model includes a series of testable predictions about how person-level and information-level factors interact to predict whether someone is likely to access an information source at all, and whether someone will go on to apply the information they receive after they have obtained it. This model, if validated, has important implications for the development and revision of intervention delivery techniques. This poster abstract received a top poster award from the Health Services Research section.
  • In my second poster, I presented results from my Master’s thesis research on food blogs written by mothers of preschool-aged children (N = 13 blogs; 325 posts). I examined the frequency of brand sponsorship on blogs and the types of brands that were represented. I found that 35% of sampled blog posts  (n = 115) were sponsored in some way, either the entire post creation was sponsored or a brand funded a give away or product review. Sponsorship of any kind varied across the 13 blogs and ranged from 0% to 20% (M = 7.7%; SD = 7.2). There were 85 unique sponsors: 64% food brands (n = 54), 36% non-food brands (n = 31). Brands that market healthier (e.g., The Blueberry Council) and
less healthy (e.g., Blue Bunny Ice Cream) foods were present. Brands that market non-food items were also present (e.g., cooking tools, lunch boxes, vacation destinations). I hope to conduct future work that examines how food marketing through social media influencers impacts the child feeding behaviors of blog readers.

What was something you learned while at TOS?

  •  One poster that really caught my eye discussed how rural residents view their place-based eating and physical activity opportunities. Dr. Michelle White and colleagues (UNC – Chapel Hill) found that rural residents frame their existing environmental conditions through a nostalgic lens, primarily one of loss. The authors suggest this nostalgic lens could prevent residents from engaging with new services that are available in their communities that could actually help them get back some of the things they are nostalgic for (e.g., farm fresh produce). I think this is fascinating research because of its implications for how to engage rural residents in obesity prevention and treatment. I would be interested in further exploring how nostalgia might impact information seeking and use based on the factors I include in the ISU model.

Allison Hepworth sharing her research at one of the poster sessions

Sally Eagleton

What was the title of your poster/talk?
  •  “Bottle feeding but not milk type impacts infant weight gain and weight status across the first year”

What were the main points of your presentation?

  • We conducted a secondary data analysis of mother-infant dyads who participated in the INSIGHT study, a randomized controlled trial designed to prevent early childhood obesity. The purpose of our analysis was to examine whether how infants are fed (i.e. at the breast or by bottle) and/or what infants are fed (i.e. breastmilk or formula) is associated with infant weight weight outcomes across the first year. Controlling for the effect of study group, we found that a higher percentage of daily milk feedings from a bottle was associated with more rapid infant weight gain from 0-6 months and higher weight-for-length z-scores at 1 year. The percentage of daily milk feedings as breastmilk was not associated with infant weight outcomes. Our results suggest that regardless of milk type (breastmilk of formula), bottle feeding may be a unique risk factor for early childhood obesity.

Alissa Smethers

What was the title of your poster/talk?

  • “Can we identify children who are most responsive to large portions?”

What were the main points of your presentation?

  • We had previously shows that serving larger portions of food and milk over 5 days to preschool children led to sustained increases in food and energy intake. Using analysis of covariance, we could that increased intake from larger portions related to children’s body size and their responsiveness to food and satiety cues.  Caregivers should recognize that children with greater body size for their age or greater responsiveness to food may be more likely to overeat when larger portions are served. In contract, children with greater responsiveness to satiety cues may be less likely to overeat form large portions.

What was something you learned while at TOS?

  • One of my favorite sessions during Obesity Week was the TOS Opening Session- Awards & Early Career Grant Challenge Competition. I found the five-minute grant talks to be intriguing, and I found the talks displayed how hard it can be to present your proposed research in a limited time frame. I also thought the talk by Diana Thomas, who was the winner of the 2017 George A. Bray Founders Award, to be very engaging. She seems to be doing cutting edge modeling looking at energy balance and weight at West Point. This was a great session to start off Obesity Week 2017.

COPT and fellow Penn Staters at the opening session at ObesityWeek 2017

Faris Zuraikat

What was the title of your poster/talk?

  • “Strategies used by women of differing weight status to moderate energy intake from large portions”

What were the main points of your presentation?

  •  Following the year-long Portion-Control Strategies Trial, we served trial participants and untrained controls of differing weight status a meal that was varied in portion size over 4 weeks. All subjects consumed a similar weight of food across portions, regardless of training or weight status. Trial participants, however, moderated their energy intake compared to untrained controls, whose energy intake did not differ by weight status. This was achieved not by limiting the amount of food eaten, but by consuming a meal lower in energy density (ED). Trial participants consumed a greater proportion of lower-ED foods than controls. For all groups, ratings of the healthfulness of the foods were correlated with the ED of the foods, but only in trained participants were higher ratings of the influence of healthfulness on food choice related to lower energy intake at meals.

What was something you learned while at TOS?

  • I thoroughly enjoyed Rena Wing’s symposium on maintenance of weight loss trials. She provided some really interesting data and provocative insights on the role of weight regain. In particular, she demonstrated that weight loss is beneficial regardless of whether or not individuals keep off all of the weight they lost.

Alyssa Spaw

What was the title of your poster/talk?

  • “What strategies help dieters to manage problem foods and facilitate weight loss?”

What were the main points of your presentation?

  • During a year long weight loss trial focused on portion control, we wanted to examine the strategies female dieters used to deal with foods they consider “problem foods” (those they cannot resist and find it hard to stop eating once they have started). After analyzing 8 proposed strategies, the only strategy related to weight loss from baseline to the end of the trial was “I limit the portion of problem foods that I eat”, though avoidance strategies were also frequently used. We advise dieters to adopt and maintain strategies to manage portions of problem foods, rather than avoid these foods.

What was something you learned while at TOS?

  • One compelling talk I attended was given by Diana Thomas, a researcher at the United State Military Academy who won the George A. Bray award. She presented on their up and coming research using machine learning to predict injury and also serve as predictors for long term weight gain. I’m excited to see where this goes in the future.

Award winning Halloween costume “Gutsy Girl”


24
Jan 17

Obesity Week Series 2016: Faris Zuraikat

Several COPT fellows attended Obesity Week 2016, the Annual Meeting of the Obesity Society, in New Orleans, Louisiana from October 31 – November 4, 2016. Each student gave us a recap and reflection on their experience. We will be featuring one student per post as part of this series.

Faris, center, with fellow lab mates and fellow COPT trainees Brittany and Alissa at Obesity Week.

Faris Zuraikat

Q: What was the title of your poster/talk?

  • The title of my poster was “An offer you can’t refuse: serving larger portions leads to increased intake despite a year of portion-control training.”

Q: What were the main points of your presentation about?

  • On four occasions, we served a lunch consisting of 7 foods varying in ED to 39 women who had participated in the Portion-Control Strategies Trial and to 63 controls. We hypothesized that the effect of increasing portion size on meal intake would be attenuated in women who had received a year of portion-control training. Across all meals, all foods were varied in portion size. Despite receiving a year of training in portion-control strategies, trial participants responded to increases in portion size by consuming more food and energy. However, trained participants did moderate their energy intake compared to controls by eating a lower-ED meal. Strategies to moderate intake in the presence of large portions are needed, and choosing lower-energy-dense foods should be a focal point of such approaches.

Q:What was something you learned while at Obesity Week?

  • I learned a lot at obesity week! Marion (Hetherington) gave a really great seminar on mastication and how oral exposure to foods, flavors, etc can influence SSS and food intake. I think one of the most interesting things that I learned was that SSS can occur without actually ingesting the food (Hetherington talk – similar decreases in pleasantness following eating and MSF). However, MSF does not lead to decreased food intake at a subsequent meal, unfortunately.
  • *Networking tip: Hang around Barbara!

20
Jan 17

Obesity Week Series 2016: Brittany James

Several COPT fellows attended Obesity Week 2016, the Annual Meeting of the Obesity Society, in New Orleans, Louisiana from October 31 – November 4, 2016. Each student gave us a recap and reflection on their experience. We will be featuring one student per post as part of this series.

Brittany, on the left, with Dr. Katherine Balantekin at the Obesity Week Welcome Reception at Mardi Gras World.

Brittany James

Q: What was the title of your poster/talk?

  • My poster was titled “A concise alternative to the Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire relates to weight change over 1 year”.

Q: What were the main points of your presentation about?

  • My poster focused on comparing the efficacy of two eating behavior questionnaires in identifying eating behaviors that relate to long-term weight change. Primarily, we found that both the Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire and the newer, more concise Weight-Related Eating Questionnaire measure facets of dietary restraint and disinhibition that are associated with weight change over time. Frequent repeat measurement allowed these associations to be studied.

Q:What was something you learned while at Obesity Week?

  • My biggest takeaway from TOS was learning how our current research findings fit within the issues at the forefront of discussion this year at Obesity Week. It was great to see how well the research questions we’ve been working on contribute to hot topic questions in the field, such as understanding more about what predicts how well someone will do in obesity treatment.
  • Obesity Week is also always a great networking opportunity, though it takes a good amount of preparation beforehand to make it work successfully. It’s such a big conference that if 1-on-1 meeting plans aren’t made ahead of time, it’s possible to miss someone completely. So while it is a good conference that I recommend, it will be an even more rewarding time if it’s planned for ahead of time.

18
Jan 17

Obesity Week Series 2016: Sally Eagleton

Several COPT fellows attended Obesity Week 2016, the Annual Meeting of the Obesity Society, in New Orleans, Louisiana from October 31 – November 4, 2016. Each student gave us a recap and reflection on their experience. We will be featuring one student per post as part of this series.

Sally Eagleton

Q: What was the title of your poster/talk?

  • Title of talk – Timing of return to work is associated with rapid infant weight gain

Q:What were the main points of your presentation about?

  • In this secondary data analysis of an intervention aimed to prevent rapid infant weight gain and early childhood obesity, we found that infants of mothers who returned to work by the time their child was 12 weeks of age experienced more rapid weight gain from 0-6 months compared to infants of mothers who returned to work after 12 weeks or not at all. The effect of return to work on rapid weight gain was not moderated by study group (participation in a responsive parenting intervention versus safety control group) or feeding mode at 16 weeks (primarily breastfed versus not) suggesting that the intervention was effective in preventing rapid weight gain regardless of return to work status and that differences in feeding mode do not explain the effect timing of return to work on rapid infant weight.

Q: What was something you learned while at Obesity Week?

  • At Obesity Week I gained insight into what family-based childhood obesity treatment looks like in a clinical setting and learned about the different components that make treatment successful/unsuccessful. I also learned how the level of parental and sibling involvement in treatment varies as a function of child age as well as differences in family characteristics related to family functioning and conflict.

17
Jan 17

Obesity Week Series 2016: Allison Doub Hepworth

Several COPT fellows attended Obesity Week 2016, the Annual Meeting of the Obesity Society, in New Orleans, Louisiana from October 31 – November 4, 2016. Each student gave us a recap and reflection on their experience. We will be featuring one student per post as part of this series.

Allison Doub Hepworth

Q: What was the title of your poster/talk?

  • I presented two posters: 1) Maternal feeding styles and children’s snack food selections: An observational study and 2) #HealthyKids on Instagram: Posts reflect interest in food, family, and personal experience, not children’s weight status.

Q: What were the main points of your presentation about?

  • My first poster described an observational study in which parents and 4.5 -year-old children are asked work together to select up to 5 snacks from 9 options (4 healthy, 5 less healthy). We found that in the majority of cases, 4.5-year-old children were given high or complete control over their snack food selections, which resulted in less nutritious snack options available for children’s later consumption.
  • In my second poster, I used natural language processing and qualitative content analysis to identify topics associated with the broad concept of ‘healthy kids’ on Instagram. Content shared with #HealthyKids on Instagram reflected existing interest in food and family-related topics. Notably, the words overweight, obese, and obesity did not occur in any captions. The high prevalence of first-person declarative statements may suggest that the content and recruitment strategies for childhood obesity interventions should take an individualized approach to increase personal relevance among caregivers.

Q:What was something you learned while at Obesity Week?

  • Dr. Anna Peeters gave a terrific presentation on how childhood obesity interventions may widen rather than reduce disparities in childhood obesity, depending on the mechanism of change. This presentation inspired me to pursue future research on how online interventions for childhood obesity may be differentially impacting individuals from varying socio-economic groups since digitally delivered interventions often target only individual-level components of behavior change.

16
Jan 17

Obesity Week 2016 Series: Nicole Fearnbach, PhD

Several COPT fellows attended Obesity Week 2016, the Annual Meeting of the Obesity Society, in New Orleans, Louisiana from October 31 – November 4, 2016. Each student gave us a recap and reflection on their experience. We will be featuring one student per post as part of this series.

Dr. Nicole Fearnbach with mentor Dr. Kathleen Keller

Nicole Fearnbach, PhD

Special Note: Nicole was a Poster Winner for the Biobehavioral Research Section, The Obesity Society. Congrats!

Q: What was the title of your presentation?

  • Impact of imposed exercise on the energy density and macronutrient profile of children’s ad libitum food intake

Q: What were the main points of your presentation?

  • Children participated in two 10-hour experimental visits in a randomized crossover design, where the meals were identical but their activity levels were varied. Children either remained sedentary during the experimental session, or participated in 30 minutes of 70% intensity exercise. Imposed exercise did not affect children’s total daily energy intake, but did result in a shift towards greater energy intakes from high-energy-dense foods, fat, and protein on the exercise day compared to the sedentary day. Children may have selectively consumed more palatable, high-energy-dense foods in response to the exercise. Providing children with a range of healthy, lower energy density food choices may be an important step toward improving post-exercise dietary quality, but additional studies are needed to confirm this.

Q: What is something you learned while at Obesity Week 2016?

  • One of the most interesting things I learned was that in the United States, overweight and obesity rates in school-aged children tend to increase during the summer months, but remain stable during the school year. This research has implications for current school-based interventions, highlighting a need to also engage children in healthy routines and lifestyles during vacation time.
  • Favorite session: Appetite control and energy balance with Prof. Marion Hetherington, Dr. Heather Leidy, and Dr. Jim Hill. It was a great mix of speakers with perspectives from psychology, nutrition, ingestive behavior, and exercise physiology.

30
Jul 15

SSIB 2015 Series: Shana Adise

Several COPT fellows attended SSIB 2015, the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Ingestive Behavior in Denver, Colorado from July 7 – July 11, 2015. Each student gave us a recap and reflection on her experience. We will be featuring one student per post as part of this series.

Shana Adise 

shana

Shana Adise presenting at SSIB 2015

Q: What was the title of your presentation?

A: Variation at a common polymorphism in the CD36 gene is associated with liking of low-fat dairy and parental perception of child weight.

Q:What were the main points of your presentation?

A: CD36 is a fatty acid translocase and putative oral fat sensor on the tongue and variation in gene expression is associated with fat preferences and acceptance as well as increased BMI. However, research has focused on studying these associations in adults and not much has been done in children. Although preliminary, our study found that in children 7-9 years old, CD36 variation may be associated with reported liking for some fat containing foods and with parental perceptions of child weight status, independent of actual child BMI.

Q: What is something you learned while at SSIB?

A: This year, much of the conference focused on understanding how inhibition maps onto food selection using a combination of neuroscience and nutrition methodology. Many of the research initiatives were designed to bridge the gap across fields by combining methodology and increasing collaboration.

Q: How do you hope your general program of research will contribute to the field of ingestive behavior? 

A: This conference is one of my favorites and attracts researchers from various fields and throughout the world. After each conference, I become inspired by the work presented and strive to become a better researcher. I hope in time, my research findings will inspire others to continue to ask questions.


30
Jul 15

SSIB 2015 Series: Laural English

Several COPT fellows attended SSIB 2015, the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Ingestive Behavior in Denver, Colorado from July 7 – July 11, 2015. Each student gave us a recap and reflection on her experience. We will be featuring one student per post as part of this series.

Laural K. English, MSc

Laural English presenting at SSIB 2015

Q: What was the title of your presentation?

A: Children’s neural response to food images that vary in portion size.

Q:What were the main points of your presentation?

A: Previous fMRI studies have investigated the response to food energy content but not food portion size. We tested the brain response to portion size in children using fMRI. Findings from our study link large food portions (relative to small) with greater bilateral engagement of the Inferior Frontal Gyrus, a brain region involved in inhibitory control. Portion size may influence dietary decisions by engaging this brain region, which would have implications for moderating energy intake.

Q: What is something you learned while at SSIB?

A: Dr. Susan Carnell gave one of my favorite talks (from several) that covered a range of research on the influences of food choice and neural correlates. Overall, I enjoyed the focus on neurocognitive profiling of eating behavior that highlighted the importance of inhibitory control, impulsivity and decision-making in response to various food cues.

Q: How do you hope your general program of research will contribute to the field of ingestive behavior? 

A: I hope that my research encourages others to examine the influence of external food cues, such as portion size, in children using fMRI. I look forward to learning about eating behavior from unique perspectives with innovative and technologically advanced methods.


22
Jul 15

SSIB 2015 Series: Kameron Moding

Several COPT fellows attended SSIB 2015, the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Ingestive Behavior in Denver, Colorado from July 7 – July 11, 2015. Each student gave us a recap and reflection on her experience. We will be featuring one student per post as part of this series. 

Kameron Moding, MS

SSIB 2015

Kameron Moding presenting at SSIB 2015

Q: What was the title of your presentation? 

A: Infants’ reactions to novel foods predict food neophobia during early childhood

Q: What were the main points of your presentation?

A: This study provides preliminary evidence that there is some stability in responses to novel foods from infancy through early childhood. However, the level of stability depends on when infants’ responses to novel foods are initially measured. Rejection during early infancy (i.e. at 6 months of age) appears to be open to the moderating influence of maternal neophobia, whereas rejection during later infancy (i.e. at 12 months of age) is moderately stable regardless of levels of maternal neophobia.

Q: What is something you learned while at SSIB? 

A: One study presented at SSIB by Golen and Ventura (“Do distracted mothers overfeed their infants?”) revealed that infants between the ages of 11 and 24 months consumed more of their bottles when their mothers were distracted during feeding than their when mothers were not distracted. Further, the distracted mothers scored significantly lower on ratings of sensitivity compared to mothers who were not distracted.

Q: How do you hope your general program of research will contribute to the field of ingestive behavior? 

A: I hope my research highlights the importance of considering child characteristics, such as temperament and self-regulation, alone and interacting with parent characteristics when studying the development of eating behaviors and childhood obesity.


22
Jul 15

SSIB 2015 Series: Nicole Fearnbach

Several COPT fellows attended SSIB 2015, the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Ingestive Behavior in Denver, Colorado from July 7 – July 11, 2015. Each student gave us a recap and reflection on her experience. We will be featuring one student per post as part of this series. 

Nicole Fearnbach

IMG_2516-2

Nicole Fearnbach presenting at SSIB 2015

Q: What was the title of your presentation? 

A: Neural response to images of food varying in energy density is associated with body composition in children

Q: What were the main points of your presentation?

A: We used fMRI to assess children’s brain responses to pictures of food that were either high or low in energy-density (kcal/g). Our results suggest that the reward response to foods varying in energy content may be influenced by child body composition, including fat mass and fat-free mass. A press release on the study can be found here.

Q: What is something you learned while at SSIB? 

A: My favorite talk of the conference was from Dr. Paul Kenny, titled Mechanisms of Compulsive Eating. He described several animal models of obesity, binge eating, and compulsive eating, and how they might map onto human ingestive behaviors.

Q: How do you hope your general program of research will contribute to the field of of ingestive behavior? 

A: I hope that my research will continue to uncover how neurological and physiological factors influence children’s energy intake, energy expenditure, and overall energy balance. I’m also hoping to learn how eating behavior and physical activity interact with one another.

IMG_2499

Keller lab members: Laural English (Left), Dr. Kathleen Keller (Center), and Nicole Fearnbach (Right) at SSIB 2015

 

 


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