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Search Results to Kai Ling Kong

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One or more keywords matched the following properties of Kong, Kai Ling

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keywords child health
research overview Dr. Kong’s research targets health during pregnancy and infancy in order to identify novel insights into childhood obesity prevention. One premise of her work is grounded in behavioral economics and necessitates valid early measures of food and non-food reinforcement. Based on this framework, an individual’s decision to eat or participate in a fun activity, for example, is moderated by their constraints on those options and the presence of alternatives. Another premise of her work is grounded in environmental enrichment and choice architecture. Relevant literature suggests that increasing the availability of options in one’s environment can be effective at making a healthy lifestyle more attainable. Within the abovementioned areas, she is intrigued by why a strong motivation to eat arises in some individuals but not others. Through a series of pilot studies, she developed a paradigm measuring the reinforcing values of food and non-food alternatives during early life. She discovered that there are individual differences in motivation to earn food vs. non-food rewards as early as infancy, and that lower motivation to engage in non-food activities is associated with a greater weight status. Such findings led her to secure an R01 investigating the efficacy of a music program to shift motivation to eat in 9–15-month-olds particularly attracted to food. In the near future, she aims to utilize data collected from this line of research to create unique approaches that enhance traditional strategies for improving infants’ energy intakes and expenditures. Rapid weight gain during the first year of life predicts later obesity and is notably prevalent among low socioeconomic status (SES) groups. Dr. Kong argues that ecological and economic circumstances experienced by low SES individuals (e.g., lack of eating alternatives, chronic deprivation) augments food reinforcement; therefore, implementing interventions that promote non-food reinforcement may decrease socioeconomic disparities in obesity. Additionally, and more broadly speaking, Dr. Kong believes that obesity prevention commencing during the prenatal period has the largest potential to effectively tackle our current epidemic. At present, she serves as a co-investigator for an R33/R21 assessing how exposure to tobacco and cannabis in utero adversely affects child health, in particular, obesity development. In another grant as well, she is interested in evaluating the relationship between maternal cholesterol levels throughout pregnancy and infant outcomes.

One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to Kong, Kai Ling

Item TypeName
Concept Child
Concept Child Behavior
Concept Child Development
Concept Child Language
Concept Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
Concept Child, Preschool
Concept Mother-Child Relations
Concept Parent-Child Relations
Academic Article Associations between Parental and Child Screen Time and Quality of the Home Environment: A Preliminary Investigation.
Academic Article Development of a measure of the relative reinforcing value of food versus parent-child interaction for young children.
Academic Article Early Nonfood Parent-Infant Interactions and Development of Obesity in a High-Risk, Diverse Sample.
Academic Article The reinforcing value of food and non-food alternative: Associations with BMI z-score and percent fat mass.
Academic Article Repeatability of the infant food reinforcement paradigm: Implications of individual and developmental differences.
Academic Article Infant Temperament Is Associated with Relative Food Reinforcement.
Academic Article Mid-childhood fruit and vegetable consumption: The roles of early liking, early consumption, and maternal consumption.
Academic Article Leisure time physical activity before and during mid-pregnancy and offspring adiposity in mid-childhood.
Academic Article Origins of food reinforcement in infants.
Academic Article Impact of a walking intervention during pregnancy on post-partum weight retention and infant anthropometric outcomes.
Academic Article Association Between Added Sugars from Infant Formulas and Rapid Weight Gain in US Infants and Toddlers.
Grant Enhancing alternatives to eating in infants
Grant Using positive parent-child interactions as an alternative reinforcer to promote healthier eating among preschoolers
Academic Article The interplay between pre-pregnancy BMI, infant negative temperament and slowness in eating on infant rapid weight gain
Academic Article Interplay between Prepregnancy Body Mass Index, Early Childhood Negative Temperament, and Slowness in Eating on Early Childhood Rapid Weight Gain.
Academic Article Examining the Relationship between Infant Weight Status and Parent-Infant Interactions within a Food and Nonfood Context.
Academic Article Systematic Review of General Parenting Intervention Impacts on Child Weight as a Secondary Outcome.
Academic Article The Association between Maternal Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Consumption and Infant/Toddler Added Sugar Intakes.
Academic Article A new paradigm for investigating the etiology of obesity in early childhood: Exposure to added sugars and hyper-palatable foods in infancy and dysregulation of food reinforcement processes.
Academic Article Prenatal tobacco and cannabis co-exposure and offspring obesity development from birth to mid-childhood.
Academic Article Caregiver feeding decisions and sociodemographic characteristics are associated with snack food intake during infancy and toddlerhood.
Academic Article The effects of a music enrichment program on parent-infant interactions during mealtime: A randomized controlled trial.
Academic Article The impact of a community-based music program during infancy on?the quality of parent-child language interactions.
Academic Article The impact of a music enrichment program during infancy and early toddlerhood on effortful control at age 3: A preliminary investigation.
Academic Article Prenatal tobacco and tobacco-cannabis co-exposure: Relationship with attention and memory in middle childhood.

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  • Child