Abstract
Background‘Food fussiness’ (FF) is the tendency to be highly selective about which foods one is willing to eat, and emerges in early childhood; ‘food neophobia’ (FN) is a closely related characteristic but specifically refers to rejection of unfamiliar food. These behaviors are associated, but the extent to which their etiological architecture overlaps is unknown. The objective of this study was to quantify the relative contribution of genetic and environmental influences to variation in FF and FN in early childhood; and to establish the extent to which they share common genetic and environmental influences.MethodParticipants were 1,921 families with 16‐month‐old twins from the Gemini birth cohort. Parents completed the Child Eating Behaviour Questionnaire which included three FF items and four FN items. Bivariate quantitative genetic modeling was used to quantify: (a) genetic and environmental contributions to variation in FF and FN; and (b) the extent to which genetic or environmental influences on FF and FN are shared across the traits.ResultsFood fussiness and FN were strongly correlated (r = .72, p < .001). Proportions of variation in FF were equally explained by genetic (.46; 95% CI: 0.41–0.52) and shared environmental influences (.46; 95% CI: 0.41–0.51). Shared environmental effects accounted for a significantly lower proportion of variation in FN (.22; 95% CI: 0.14–0.30), but genetic influences were not significantly different from those on FF (.58, 95% CI: 0.50–0.67). FF and FN largely shared a common etiology, indicated by high genetic (.73; 95% CI: 0.67–0.78) and shared environmental correlations (.78; 95% CI: 0.69–0.86) across the two traits.ConclusionsFood fussiness and FN both show considerable heritability at 16 months but shared environmental factors, for example the home environment, influenced more interindividual differences in the expression of FF than in FN. FF and FN largely share a common etiology.
Highlights
During early childhood, children are gradually introduced to an increasingly varied diet comprising previously unseen foods of different flavors, textures and visual characteristics
While some children willingly accept new foods, many are hesitant. These behaviors can be broadly characterized as food fussiness (FF) and food neophobia (FN), and are characteristics of early childhood eating problems seen in clinical settings (Bryant-Waugh, Markham, Kreipe, & Walsh, 2010)
The intraclass correlations (ICCs) for the DZs were significant, and were significantly lower than those for the MZs, because the 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) of the estimates did not overlap those for the MZs for either trait (FF: .68; 95% CI: 0.65–0.71; FN: .51; 95% CI: 0.47–0.55)
Summary
Children are gradually introduced to an increasingly varied diet comprising previously unseen foods of different flavors, textures and visual characteristics. While some children willingly accept new foods, many are hesitant. These behaviors can be broadly characterized as food fussiness (FF) and food neophobia (FN), and are characteristics of early childhood eating problems seen in clinical settings (Bryant-Waugh, Markham, Kreipe, & Walsh, 2010). FF is the tendency to be selective about the foods one is willing to try, often focusing on food-specific attributes such as texture; FN is an overlapping construct but refers to the refusal to try unfamiliar foods (Smith, Roux, Naidoo, & Venter, 2005). Parents consider FF and FN problematic because excessively fussy children may eat too little or a restricted number of foods; and excessive
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